
Essentialism
The Disciplined Pursuit of Less
by Greg McKeown
Editorial review
McKeown's book is the most useful single text on saying no, and on the small politics of doing fewer things better. Some readers will find the message simple; the discipline of acting on it is the lifelong work.
AI-generated summary
Essentialism reframes productivity around a single question: what is the highest-value thing I could be doing right now? The book argues that the discipline of explicit trade-offs — rather than vague 'priorities' — is what separates effective people from busy ones.
Key takeaways
- 1
If everything is a priority, nothing is.
- 2
The most successful people make decisions through a 'hell yes or no' filter.
- 3
Saying yes to the trivial means saying no to the important.
- 4
Recovery, sleep, and play are not the opposite of productivity — they enable it.
The right reader
Overcommitted high-performers. Pair with 'Deep Work' and 'Atomic Habits.'
What it touches
How it reads
Measured, clarifying.
Reading difficulty: Accessible



