Eat That Frog - Deepstash
Eat That Frog

Maddox 's Key Ideas from Eat That Frog
by Brian Tracy

Ideas, facts & insights covering these topics:

12 ideas

·

141 reads

Explore the World's Best Ideas

Join today and uncover 100+ curated journeys from 50+ topics. Unlock access to our mobile app with extensive features.

The Frog Principle

The Frog Principle

The Frog Principle states that you should tackle your most difficult and important task first thing each morning. This approach works because:

  • Your willpower and mental energy are highest in the morning
  • Completing important tasks triggers dopamine release that motivates further action
  • Starting with lesser tasks creates a pattern of avoidance and diminishing returns
  • The psychological weight of important undone tasks drains your energy all day

By eating your frog first, you ensure that even if you accomplish nothing else that day, you've completed something significant.

1

13 reads

Zero-Based Thinking

Zero-Based Thinking

Zero-Based Thinking requires periodically evaluating all activities as if you were starting fresh today. The fundamental question to ask is: Knowing what I now know, would I get into this situation again? This approach:

  • Helps identify historical investments draining your time and energy
  • Prevents the sunk-cost fallacy from keeping you in unproductive situations
  • Creates space for new opportunities by eliminating outdated commitments
  • Applies to business ventures, relationships, projects, and personal habits

The most successful people regularly review all areas of their lives with this question, then have the courage to make difficult changes based on their honest assessment.

2

11 reads

The ability to concentrate single-mindedly on your most important task, to do it well and to finish it completely, is the key to great success, achievement, respect, status, and happiness in life.

BRIAN TRACY

1

11 reads

ABCDE Method

ABCDE Method

The ABCDE Method provides a practical framework for prioritizing tasks when everything seems important. The system works as follows:

  • A tasks: Must be done. Significant consequences if not completed.
  • B tasks: Should be done. Minor consequences if not completed.
  • C tasks: Would be nice to do. No consequences if not completed.
  • D tasks: Can be delegated to someone else.
  • E tasks: Can be eliminated completely.

The discipline lies in never working on B tasks until all A tasks are complete, never working on C tasks until all B tasks are complete, and so on. This forces honest evaluation of what truly matters versus what merely feels urgent.

1

10 reads

The 80/20 Rule

The 80/20 Rule

The 80/20 Rule (also called the Pareto Principle) reveals that 80% of results come from 20% of activities. This principle applies universally:

  • 80% of your success comes from 20% of your activities
  • 80% of your income derives from 20% of your clients or products
  • 80% of your problems stem from 20% of possible sources
  • 80% of your satisfaction comes from 20% of your experiences

The practical application is straightforward: identify the vital 20% of activities that create 80% of your desired outcomes, then focus your best time and energy there. This approach often allows you to quintuple results while potentially reducing total effort.

1

11 reads

Planning System

Planning System

Effective planning multiplies productivity by creating clarity before action. Research shows every minute spent planning saves 10 minutes in execution. A proper planning system includes:

  • Annual goals: Major objectives for the year in each area of life
  • Monthly plans: Broken-down achievements needed to reach annual goals
  • Weekly objectives: Specific outcomes to accomplish in the coming week
  • Daily task list: Prepared the night before, organized by priority

The most productive people spend 10-12 minutes planning each day in advance. This creates a productivity blueprint that prevents wasted time, reduces stress, and ensures focus on high-value activities first.

1

14 reads

One of the very worst uses of time is to do something very well that need not be done at all.

BRIAN TRACY

1

15 reads

Slice The Salami

Slice The Salami

The Salami Technique overcomes procrastination by breaking overwhelming tasks into tiny, manageable slices. This method works because:

  • Small tasks don't trigger the psychological resistance that large projects do
  • Completing even minor steps creates momentum and builds confidence
  • Progress becomes visible quickly, providing motivational feedback
  • Complex problems become clearer when dissected into components

When facing any significant challenge, the key question becomes: What's one small piece I could complete in a single sitting? By focusing exclusively on that slice—with no obligation to continue—you overcome inertia and create forward motion.

1

10 reads

Single-Handling

Single-Handling

Single-handling means working on a task continuously until it's 100% complete. This approach dramatically increases productivity because:

  • Each interruption adds 50-100% to the time required to complete a task
  • Task-switching creates attention residue that impairs cognitive performance
  • The state of flow—your most productive mental state—takes ~25 minutes to achieve
  • Completion of tasks releases psychological energy tied up in unfinished work

The practical application involves selecting your most important task, eliminating all possible distractions, and working on it with complete focus until it's done. This technique alone can double or triple productivity without requiring additional time.

2

10 reads

Three Before Noon

Three Before Noon

The Three Before Noon rule leverages your most productive hours by committing to complete your three most important tasks before midday. This approach is powerful because:

  • Mental energy and willpower naturally peak in the morning hours for most people
  • Completing important tasks early creates momentum that carries through the day
  • Morning hours typically have fewer external interruptions and distractions
  • Success becomes defined by quality of accomplishment rather than hours worked

By protecting your morning hours for high-value work and scheduling meetings, calls, and administrative tasks for the afternoon, you ensure progress on what truly matters regardless of how the day unfolds.

1

11 reads

Eat your frog first thing in the morning, and nothing worse will happen to you for the rest of the day.

BRIAN TRACY

1

15 reads

The Law of Three

The Law of Three

The Law of Three simplifies decision-making by forcing prioritization when everything seems important. The process involves asking:

  • What are the three most important things I could accomplish today?
  • Which three tasks would contribute most to my long-term goals?
  • If I could only complete one task today, which would give the greatest return?

This approach works because most to-do lists combine truly important tasks with urgent but ultimately unimportant activities. By constraining your focus to just three priorities, then identifying the single most important item among them, you gain clarity that overcomes procrastination and ensures meaningful daily progress.

1

10 reads

IDEAS CURATED BY

maddoxe

"The key is in not spending time, but in investing it." - Covey

CURATOR'S NOTE

<p>Feeling overwhelmed by your never-ending to-do list? This practical guide cuts straight to what's keeping you stuck—procrastination on your biggest tasks. Brian Tracy delivers a straightforward system for tackling your most important work first thing each day. No fluff, just proven strategies that have helped millions stop putting things off and start getting more done. Think of it as your roadmap to moving from "someday" to "done today."</p>

Different Perspectives Curated by Others from Eat That Frog

Curious about different takes? Check out our book page to explore multiple unique summaries written by Deepstash curators:

Discover Key Ideas from Books on Similar Topics

Your Next Five Moves

16 ideas

Your Next Five Moves

Patrick Bet-David

Be Your Future Self Now

7 ideas

Be Your Future Self Now

Dr. Benjamin Hardy

Four Thousand Weeks

16 ideas

Four Thousand Weeks

Oliver Burkeman

Read & Learn

20x Faster

without
deepstash

with
deepstash

with

deepstash

Personalized microlearning

100+ Learning Journeys

Access to 200,000+ ideas

Access to the mobile app

Unlimited idea saving

Unlimited history

Unlimited listening to ideas

Downloading & offline access

Supercharge your mind with one idea per day

Enter your email and spend 1 minute every day to learn something new.

Email

I agree to receive email updates