
The ONE Thing
by Gary Keller & Jay Papasan · 2013
What's the one thing you can do such that everything else becomes easier or unnecessary?
Worth reading? The cleanest single-idea productivity book: ruthlessly cut to the one task that makes everything else easier or unnecessary. If you juggle ten priorities and know only one matters, this is the book. Skip it if you already time-block your most important task daily — that's the whole argument.
| Author | Gary Keller & Jay Papasan |
|---|---|
| Published | 2013 |
| Category | Self-Improvement & Psychology |
The Verdict
The focusing question in the title is genuinely useful, and the domino framing (line up small wins that knock over bigger ones) makes prioritization concrete. Keller built the largest real estate company in the world on this operating system. The book stretches one insight, but it’s the right insight.
people juggling ten priorities who secretly know only one matters
you already time-block your most important task daily (that's the whole book)
Book Summary
Success is sequential, not simultaneous: one focused domino knocks over the next. Ask "what's the ONE Thing I can do such that by doing it everything else is easier or unnecessary?" and aim your day at the answer. The book's enemy is the lie of balance and multitasking. It pushes time-blocking a single priority, protecting long stretches of focused work, and saying no to almost everything else.
Top 6 Lessons from The ONE Thing
- Cut your list to the one task that unlocks the rest.
- Multitasking is a myth; depth beats breadth.
- Time-block your ONE Thing before the day books itself with noise.
- When you say yes to one thing, you say no to everything else — choose on purpose.
- Big goals need a long, protected runway, not daily firefighting.
- Willpower is finite; spend it on the priority first.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is The ONE Thing worth reading?
Yes for people juggling ten priorities who secretly know only one matters — it forces the cut. Skip it if you already time-block your top task daily.
What is the main idea of The ONE Thing?
Focus on the single most important task that makes everything else easier or unnecessary, and protect time for it.
How long does it take to read The ONE Thing?
It's a short, fast read — roughly 4 to 5 hours at normal pace.
Who should read The ONE Thing?
People juggling many priorities who want a simple way to pick the one that matters most.
Ready to read it?
Get The ONE Thing on AmazonRead Next
- Best Books for Personal Growth: 9 That Compound Over Years
- Best Books on Productivity: 8 That Respect Your Finite Time
- Best Books to Build Confidence: 8 That Change How You See Yourself
- Best Books to Change Your Life: 9 That Actually Shift How You Live
- Best Books to Improve Communication: 7 Ranked by What They Fix
- Best Books to Stop Overthinking: 8 That Quiet the Spiral
- Best Habit Books: 8 Ranked, and Which One You Actually Need
- Best Self-Improvement Books: 9 That Survive a Skeptic







