Do the Hard Things First by Scott Allan reveals how self-control, not talent, is the true key to success. This practical guide teaches you to overcome instant gratification, break bad habits, and build unshakable discipline. With proven strategies for resisting temptation, mastering your mind, and doing the hardest task first, this book empowers you to take control of your actions and achieve lasting results in work, health, and life.
Do the Hard Things First is a powerful guide to mastering self-control, the most underrated skill for lasting success.
Written by Scott Allan, a leading personal development coach and mindset strategist, this book dismantles the myth that talent or intelligence are the keys to achievement. Instead, it argues that self-control is the foundation of all meaningful progress.
“Success isn’t about what you know, it’s about what you do when no one is watching.”
Allan shows that the ability to delay gratification, resist temptation, and stay focused on long-term goals separates high performers from everyone else.
This summary walks you through the core principles of the book, offering actionable strategies to overcome procrastination, break compulsive habits, and build unshakable willpower, so you can finally achieve your biggest goals.
Most people believe success comes from:
But decades of research, and real-world results, show that self-control is a stronger predictor of achievement than IQ.
Allan explains:
“The gap between who you are and who you want to be is filled with self-control.”
He introduces the idea that willpower is like a muscle: weak at first, but grows stronger with consistent training.
Allan identifies the root causes of self-sabotage:
Our brains are wired to seek quick rewards. Eating junk food, scrolling social media, or skipping workouts feel good now, but harm us later.
“Your future self pays for every impulsive decision.”
Stress, boredom, loneliness, and fear trigger destructive behaviors, overeating, overspending, avoiding work.
Most people rely on willpower alone. But without systems, even strong-willed people fail under pressure.
Many think self-control means constant struggle. In reality, it’s about designing your environment and habits so resistance becomes automatic.
“You don’t need more willpower, you need fewer temptations.”
The title of the book is both a strategy and a mindset:
Tackle your most important, most difficult task first, before energy fades and distractions arise.
Allan teaches that:
“Eat the frog. Crush the challenge. Own your day.”
Examples include:
Once the hardest thing is done, everything else feels easier.
Allan presents a proven framework built on four key techniques:
Train yourself to pause before acting on impulse.
“Delay defeats desire.”
Over time, delayed impulses lose their power.
Change your surroundings to support good behavior.
“Make good choices easy and bad choices hard.”
Willpower works best when you don’t have to use it.
Stop trying to “have” self-control, start being someone who naturally exercises it.
Ask:
“What would a disciplined person do right now?”
When you see yourself as someone who:
…you act accordingly.
“You become what you believe.”
Build resilience through small acts of discomfort.
These micro-challenges train your brain to tolerate pain and persist.
“Discomfort is the gym for your willpower.”
Allan shares practical tools to defeat common temptations:
“Every ‘no’ today is a ‘yes’ to your future.”
For professionals and entrepreneurs, self-control is non-negotiable.
Allan shows how to:
“Clients don’t care how smart you are, they care if you deliver.”
He also emphasizes that:
“A reputation for excellence is built one disciplined decision at a time.”
Self-control isn’t just for productivity, it transforms relationships.
Allan teaches that:
“Love is an action, not just a feeling.”
He encourages readers to:
“The most powerful relationship tool is self-mastery.”
Throughout the book, Allan shares stories from his coaching practice:
These examples prove that self-control is learnable, and life-changing.
Allan draws from psychology and neuroscience:
“You’re not weak, you’re just using outdated strategies.”
Modern science confirms: self-control can be trained.
Allan provides practical tools you can start today:
Identify your most important task each day, and do it before anything else.
Track when and why you give in to impulses. Patterns reveal triggers.
Practice delaying small urges (e.g., checking phone, eating dessert) to strengthen willpower.
Walk through your home and office. What temptations are within reach?
Write: “I am the kind of person who…” and list disciplined traits.
“Small wins compound into massive change.”
Allan encourages several powerful mindset shifts:
These shifts move you from victimhood to ownership.
Do the Hard Things First is not about punishment, it’s about liberation.
Allan writes:
“True freedom isn’t doing whatever you want. It’s having the power to do what matters most.”
When you master self-control:
As he puts it:
“The person you become while chasing your goals is more important than the goal itself.”
And that person starts with one choice:
Doing the hard thing, first.