The One Thing
The surprisingly simple truth behind extraordinary results
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4.4 • 103 Ratings
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- £5.99
Publisher Description
YOU WANT LESS.
You want fewer distractions and less on your plate. The daily barrage of e-mails, texts, tweets, messages, and meetings distract you and stress you out. The simultaneous demands of work and family are taking a toll. And what's the cost? Second-rate work, missed deadlines, smaller pay cheques, fewer promotions-and lots of stress.
AND YOU WANT MORE.
You want more productivity from your work. More income for a better lifestyle. You want more satisfaction from life, and more time for yourself, your family, and your friends.
NOW YOU CAN HAVE BOTH-LESS AND MORE.
In The ONE Thing, you'll learn to
* cut through the clutter
* achieve better results in less time
* build momentum toward your goal
* dial down the stress
* overcome that overwhelmed feeling
* revive your energy
* stay on track
* master what matters to you
The ONE Thing is the New York Times bestseller which delivers extraordinary results in every area of your life-work, personal, family, and spiritual.
WHAT'S YOUR ONE THING?
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Part motivational book, part self-help, the latest from Keller (The Millionaire Real Estate
Customer Reviews
Just what I needed
I've read plenty of books on setting and achieving your goals. This is the best one so far! Every chapter has a compelling insight that made me re-think. I began implementing the ONE thing during the read and I am starting to see improvements already.
I'm replacing non-productive habits with my ONE thing. It's addictive :-)
The One Thing
I absolutely loved reading this book and have put “the one thing” practices into my life... a totally great read! 🤩
Unnecessarily long
I’ve read a fair few life coaching/self help books, and my god did I struggle to pull myself through this one.
I don’t know why it was so long, the author spends 300 pages talking about the exact same thing over over again (it appears to be the books ONE thing). Realistically It could have been summarised in 30 pages of less.
Whilst it’s a good concept I feel like a lot of it’s just kind of common sense? Especially if you have read similar books about productivity etc in the past.