Multiple-choice (11)
1. Why does this chapter substitute "planned vs. unplanned" for the classic "important vs. unimportant"?
- The two terms mean the same thing
- Because "important" is subjective and easily rationalized under pressure, while "planned" has an objective check: is the task on your written SMART goal list? ✓
- Because Covey suggested it
- Because "planned" sounds more professional
2. Which quadrant is Covey's most important, and what does it contain?
- Quadrant I (Urgent + Planned): crises and overdue work
- Quadrant II (Not Urgent + Planned): planned work that's not yet due, where leverage lives ✓
- Quadrant III (Urgent + Unplanned): other people's emergencies
- Quadrant IV (Not Urgent + Unplanned): waste
3. What does Quadrant III contain, and what's the correct discipline for it?
- Crises; handle them first
- Tasks that are urgent but unplanned (someone else's emergency brought to your door); decline, delegate, or defer ✓
- Long-term planning; schedule weekly
- Restful breaks; protect them
4. What's the Pareto principle, and how does it apply to task management?
- 80% of work should be done by 20% of people
- Roughly 80% of effects come from 20% of causes; 80% of useful output comes from 20% of the things on your list, so identifying that 20% is the leverage point ✓
- Tasks should be split 80/20 between urgent and important
- Work 80% of the day; rest 20%
5. What does the slogan "an interruption is someone else's emergency" actually counsel?
- Always help when interrupted; that's the duty
- When someone brings you a fire, the first honest question is whose fire it is, and if it doesn't advance your plan, decide whether to help, delegate, or defer ✓
- Never accept any interruption
- Schedule a daily interruption window
6. Where does rest belong on the matrix, and why?
- Quadrant IV always; rest is waste
- Rest belongs in Quadrant II (Not Urgent + Planned) when it's planned renewal that serves your goals; ad-hoc collapsed-on-the-couch time is Quadrant IV waste ✓
- Outside the matrix entirely
- Quadrant I; rest is always urgent
7. What's the warning sign that you're stuck in Quadrant I?
- You feel productive
- Your week is wall-to-wall crises and overdue work: you're reacting, not planning, and you haven't fed Quadrant II in a long time ✓
- You have a long task list
- You haven't taken a vacation in a month
8. Where did the urgent/important axis come from originally?
- Covey invented it in 1989
- President Eisenhower (1954): "I have two kinds of problems, the urgent and the important. The urgent are not important, and the important are never urgent." Covey adapted it for the 7 Habits. ✓
- Drucker invented it in 1954
- Pareto in 1896
9. How does Maxwell's Law of Priorities apply the Planned/Unplanned matrix as a diagnostic?
- It says all tasks deserve equal priority
- "Activity is not necessarily accomplishment." Busy can be all Quadrant III; the test is whether the work laddered to a written goal you'd already decided mattered ✓
- Priorities are subjective; the matrix doesn't help
- It contradicts the matrix
10. What does Maxwell's Law of Timing add to the matrix beyond the urgent / not-urgent axis?
- Nothing; it's the same idea
- Timing is the second axis in disguise: right thing wrong time is still wrong; the matrix forces explicit thinking about timing every time a task is placed ✓
- Timing matters only in sports
- Maxwell rejected the matrix
11. What's McKeown's working rule from Essentialism, and how does it apply to the matrix?
- Do everything you say yes to
- "If it isn't a clear yes, it's a clear no." Applied to Quadrant III items: anything that doesn't pass the clear-yes test against your written goals gets declined or deferred without guilt ✓
- Less is always more
- Saying no is rude