The 7 Habits is the most trusted framework to improve individual effectiveness, leadership, and team performance.
We’ve reimagined The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People® to be even more relevant and impactful for today’s workers. What can it do for you?
- Increase individual effectiveness, build strong character, and authentically change behavior in enduring ways.
- Promote a shared language and build a winning culture.
- Establish more collaborative and creative teams, capable of breakthrough results.
- Create and empower leaders at every level.
Learn how APi Group developed and empowered leaders at every level—ensuring they have both the character and competence to lead themselves and others—with the 7 Habits.
See how the adoption of the 7 Habits played a crucial role in helping Panda Restaurant Group to develop a community-minded, winning culture of respect, growth, and shared principles that inspires individuals and teams to thrive.
Discover how a chance encounter with the 7 Habits led former NFL quarterback Steve Young to a life-changing paradigm shift centered around increased emotional intelligence, leadership, collaboration, and unstoppable growth.
See how Birchwood revolutionized its team members’ individual effectiveness with the 7 Habits framework, allowing for greater engagement, initiative, accountability, and whole-person development—leading to monumental results.
Learn how Russell Wahl, founder of Sonoma County Carpentry, transformed his life during a time of personal and professional turmoil, illustrating the power of The 7 Habits Effect.
Develop individual effectiveness and personal leadership skills with the 7 Habits.
The 7 Habits framework is rooted in universal principles that are timeless, trusted, and proven. This course equips your team with the tools to develop emotional intelligence, foster proactive problem-solving, and cultivate high-trust relationships. Tailored for today’s evolving workplace, the 7 Habits presents opportunities for meaningful personal and interpersonal growth at every level.
Thinking you might be capable of taking on more is the first step toward actually doing it.







