
The Power of Habit
by Charles Duhigg · 2012
Cue, routine, reward. The book that explained the habit loop before Atomic Habits systematized it.
Worth reading? The book that explained the habit loop -- cue, routine, reward -- before Atomic Habits turned it into a system, and still the best for seeing habits at every scale. Duhigg's cases (Alcoa's safety turnaround, Target's pregnancy predictions, Starbucks) show the loop running inside companies and societies, not just you. Skip it if you only want personal tactics -- Atomic Habits does that part better.
| Author | Charles Duhigg |
|---|---|
| Published | 2012 |
| Category | Self-Improvement & Psychology |
The Verdict
Duhigg is a reporter, and it shows in the best way: the Alcoa safety story, Target’s pregnancy predictions, and Tony Dungy’s defense are unforgettable case studies of the habit loop at individual, company, and society scale. Read this to understand habits, then Atomic Habits to build them.
readers who want the science and stories behind habits, including organizational ones
you only want personal tactics (Atomic Habits does that part better)
Book Summary
Every habit is a loop: a cue triggers a routine that earns a reward, and the brain automating that loop is what frees up attention for everything else. Name the three parts and you can find the seam to change any behavior.
Keystone habits shift everything around them. Alcoa's focus on worker safety rewired the whole company's discipline; one change cascaded into quality, cost, and culture without targeting them directly.
Habits run at the scale of organizations and societies too. Target infers life changes from buying patterns, and Starbucks trains willpower as a routine -- proof the loop isn't personal, it's structural, and you can redesign it on purpose.
Top 6 Lessons from The Power of Habit
- Name the cue, routine, and reward to change any habit.
- Find a keystone habit that moves everything else.
- Willpower is a routine you can train, not a fixed trait.
- Cravings, not the reward itself, power the loop.
- Habits scale to companies and societies, not just you.
- Belief that change is possible keeps the new loop alive.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is The Power of Habit worth reading?
Yes if you want the science and the stories behind habits at every scale. Skip it if you only want personal tactics -- Atomic Habits does that part better.
What is the main idea of The Power of Habit?
Habits are a three-step loop -- cue, routine, reward -- that runs in individuals, companies, and societies, and once you name the parts you can redesign the behavior.
How long does it take to read The Power of Habit?
About 480 pages including notes, but it reads like reported narrative -- a week of commutes or a focused weekend.
Who should read The Power of Habit?
Readers who want the science and stories behind habits, including organizational ones. Skip it if you only want personal tactics.
Ready to read it?
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