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Give and Take: Why Helping Others Drives Our Success Paperback – March 25, 2014

4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars 6,243 ratings

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A groundbreaking look at why our interactions with others hold the key to success, from the bestselling author of Originals

For generations, we have focused on the individual drivers of success: passion, hard work, talent, and luck. But in today’s dramatically reconfigured world, success is increasingly dependent on how we interact with others. In
Give and Take, Adam Grant, an award-winning researcher and Wharton’s highest-rated professor, examines the surprising forces that shape why some people rise to the top of the success ladder while others sink to the bottom. Praised by social scientists, business theorists, and corporate leaders, Give and Take opens up an approach to work, interactions, and productivity that is nothing short of revolutionary.
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Editorial Reviews

Review

Give and Take just might be the most important book of this young century. As insightful and entertaining as Malcolm Gladwell at his best, this book has profound implications for how we manage our careers, deal with our friends and relatives, raise our children, and design our institutions. This gem is a joy to read, and it shatters the myth that greed is the path to success.”
—Robert Sutton, author of The No *sshole Rule and Good Boss, Bad Boss

Give and Take is a truly exhilarating book—the rare work that will shatter your assumptions about how the world works and keep your brain firing for weeks after you've turned the last page.”
—Daniel H. Pink, author of Drive and A Whole New Mind

Give and Take is brimming with life-changing insights. As brilliant as it is wise, this is not just a book—it's a new and shining worldview. Adam Grant is one of the great social scientists of our time, and his extraordinary new book is sure to be a bestseller.”
—Susan Cain, author of Quiet

Give and Take cuts through the clutter of clichés in the marketplace and provides a refreshing new perspective on the art and science of success. Adam Grant has crafted a unique, ‘must have’ toolkit for accomplishing goals through collaboration and reciprocity.”
—William P. Lauder, Executive Chairman, The Estée Lauder Companies Inc.

Give and Take is a pleasure to read, extraordinarily informative, and will likely become one of the classic books on workplace leadership and management. It has changed the way I see my personal and professional relationships, and has encouraged me to be a more thoughtful friend and colleague.”
—Jeff Ashby, NASA space shuttle commander

“With
Give and Take, Adam Grant has marshaled compelling evidence for a revolutionary way of thinking about personal success in business and in life. Besides the fundamentally uplifting character of the case he makes, readers will be delighted by the truly engaging way he makes it. This is a must read.”
—Robert Cialdini, author of Influence

Give and Take is a brilliant, well-documented, and motivating debunking of ‘good guys finish last’! I've noticed for years that generosity generates its own kind of equity, and Grant's fascinating research and engaging style have created not only a solid validation of that principle but also practical wisdom and techniques for utilizing it more effectively. This is a super manifesto for getting meaningful things done, sustainably.”
—David Allen, author of Getting Things Done

“Packed with cutting-edge research, concrete examples, and deep insight,
Give and Take offers extraordinarily thought-provoking—and often surprising—conclusions about how our interactions with others drive our success and happiness. This important and compulsively-readable book deserves to be a huge success.”
—Gretchen Rubin, author of The Happiness Project and Happier at Home

“One of the great secrets of life is that those who win most are often those who give most. In this elegant and lucid book, filled with compelling evidence and evocative examples, Adam Grant shows us why and how this is so. Highly recommended!”
—William Ury, coauthor of Getting to Yes and author of The Power of a Positive No

“Good guys finish first—and Adam Grant knows why.
Give and Take is the smart surprise you can't afford to miss."
—Daniel Gilbert, author of Stumbling on Happiness

Give and Take is an enlightening read for leaders who aspire to create meaningful and sustainable changes to their environments. Grant demonstrates how a generous orientation toward others can serve as a formula for producing successful leaders and organizational performance. His writing is as engaging and enjoyable as his style in the classroom.”
—Kenneth Frazier, Chairman, President, and CEO of Merck & Co.

“In this riveting and sparkling book, Adam Grant turns the conventional wisdom upside-down about what it takes to win and get ahead. With page-turning stories and compelling studies,
Give and Take reveals the surprising forces behind success, and the steps we can take to enhance our own.”
—Laszlo Bock, Senior Vice President of People Operations, Google

Give and Take dispels commonly held beliefs that equate givers with weakness and takers with strength. Grant shows us the importance of nurturing and encouraging prosocial behaviors.”
—Dan Ariely, author of Predictably Irrational

Give and Take defines a road to success marked by new ways of relating to colleagues and customers as well as new ways of growing a business.”
—Tony Hsieh, CEO, Zappos.com and author of Delivering Happiness

“A milestone! Well-researched, generous, actionable and important. Adam Grant has given us a gift, a hard-hitting book about the efficacy of connection and generosity in everything we do.”
—Seth Godin, bestselling author of The Icarus Deception and Tribes

Give and Take will fundamentally change the way you think about success. Unfortunately in America, we have too often succumbed to the worldview that if everyone behaved in their own narrow self-interest, all would be fine. Adam Grant shows us with compelling research and fascinating stories there is a better way.”
—Lenny Mendonca, Director, McKinsey & Co.

“Adam Grant, a rising star of positive psychology, seamlessly weaves together science and stories of business success and failure, convincing us that giving is in the long run the recipe for success in the corporate world. En route you will find yourself re-examining your own life. Read it yourself, then give copies to the people you care most about in this world.”
—Martin Seligman, author of Learned Optimism and Flourish

Give and Take presents a groundbreaking new perspective on success. Adam Grant offers a captivating window into innovative principles that drive effectiveness at every level of an organization and can immediately be put into action. Along with being a fascinating read, this book holds the key to a more satisfied and productive workplace, better customer relationships, and higher profits.”
—Chip Conley, Founder, Joie de Vivre Hotels and author, Peak and Emotional Equations

Give and Take is a game changer. Reading Adam Grant's compelling book will change the way doctors doctor, managers manage, teachers teach, and bosses boss. It will create a society in which people do better by being better. Read the book and change the way you live and work.”
—Barry Schwartz, author of The Paradox of Choice and Practical Wisdom

Give and Take is a new behavioral benchmark for doing business for better, providing an inspiring new perspective on how to succeed to the benefit of all. Adam Grant provides great support for the new paradigm of creating a ‘win win’ for people, planet and profit with many fabulous insights and wonderful stories to get you fully hooked and infected with wanting to give more and take less."
—Jochen Zeitz, former CEO and chairman, PUMA

Give and Take is a real gift. Adam Grant delivers a triple treat: stories as good as a well-written novel, surprising insights drawn from rigorous science, and advice on using those insights to catapult ourselves and our organizations to success. I can’t think of another book with more powerful implications for both business and life.”
—Teresa Amabile, author of The Progress Principle

“Adam Grant has written a landmark book that examines what makes some extraordinarily successful people so great. By introducing us to highly-impressive individuals, he proves that, contrary to popular belief, the best way to climb to the top of the ladder is to take others up there with you.
Give and Take presents the road to success for the 21st century.”
—Maria Eitel, founding CEO and President of the Nike Foundation

“What
The No *sshole Rule did for corporate culture, Give and Take does for each of us as individuals. Grant presents an evidence-based case for the counterintuitive link between generosity and finishing first.”
—Douglas Stone and Sheila Heen, coauthors of Difficult Conversations

“Adam Grant is a wunderkind. He has won every distinguished research award and teaching award in his field, and his work has changed the way that people see the world. If you want to be surprised—very pleasantly surprised—by what really drives success, then
Give and Take is for you. If you want to make the world a better place, read this book. If you want to make your life better, read this book.”
—Tal Ben-Shahar, author of Happier

“In an era of business literature that drones on with the same-old, over-used platitudes, Adam Grant forges brilliant new territory.
Give and Take helps readers understand how to maximize their effectiveness and help others simultaneously. It will serve as a new framework for both insight and achievement. A must read!”
—Josh Linkner, founder of ePrize, CEO of Detroit Venture Partners, and author of Disciplined Dreaming

From the Inside Flap

Recognition for Give and Take:
  • Amazon's best books of 2013
  • Financial Times books of the year
  • Wall Street Journal favorite books of 2013
  • Oprah's riveting reads
  • Fortune must-read business books
  • Washington Post books every leader should read
  • Apple iTunes best of 2013
  • Inc.'s best books for entrepreneurs
  • Amazon customer favorites: one of the top 100 print books of 2013
  • Translated into two dozen languages

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ 0143124986
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Penguin Books (March 25, 2014)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 320 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 9780143124986
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0143124986
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 2.31 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 5.5 x 0.68 x 8.42 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars 6,243 ratings

About the author

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Adam Grant
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ADAM GRANT is an organizational psychologist at Wharton, where he has been the top-rated professor for seven straight years. A #1 New York Times bestselling author and one of TED’s most popular speakers, his books have sold millions of copies and been translated into 45 languages, his talks have been viewed over 35 million times, and his podcasts Re:Thinking and WorkLife have been downloaded over 65 million times. His pioneering research has inspired people to rethink fundamental assumptions about motivation, generosity, creativity, and potential. Adam has been recognized as one of the world’s 10 most influential management thinkers and Fortune’s 40 under 40, and has received distinguished scientific achievement awards from the American Psychological Association, the Academy of Management, and the National Science Foundation. His viral piece on languishing was the most-read New York Times article of 2021 and the most-saved article across platforms. He received his BA from Harvard and his PhD from the University of Michigan, and he is a former junior Olympic springboard diver and magician. He lives in Philadelphia with his wife Allison and their three children.

Customer reviews

4.5 out of 5 stars
6,243 global ratings

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Customers say

Customers find the book provides valuable information and practical tips. They describe it as a useful, interesting read with an easy flow. The book offers insights into the nature and success of givers. It shows how being generous benefits everyone. Readers find the book enjoyable and stimulating, combining entertaining stories with thought-provoking content.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

386 customers mention "Insight"378 positive8 negative

Customers find the book provides valuable information and practical tips. They say it's well-researched, well-written, and helps develop professional careers. The book also explains how people behave in the workplace.

"...For me the meatiest chapter covered the successful practices that givers follow in communicating with others, in presenting, selling, and negotiating..." Read more

"...In Give and Take: Why Helping Others Drives Our Success, Adam Grant reveals that a life strategy of being a giver as opposed to a taker or a matcher..." Read more

"...Giving can be more powerful and less dangerous than most would believe. “..." Read more

"...reading because it is backed by several decades of excellent peer-reviewed scientific evidence on organizational citizenship, prosocial, and helping..." Read more

330 customers mention "Readability"323 positive7 negative

Customers find the book readable and useful. They say it's interesting and worth reading, and an excellent choice for reading groups or workplace discussions. The book has good content about how not to get taken advantage of.

"...by Wharton professor Adam Grant, has a great chance of being the best book I've read all year, for three reasons: it's inspirational, it's..." Read more

"...It’s a good read with good lessons. Grant summarizes many of those lessons in a final chapter called “Actions for Impact.”..." Read more

"...of books on leadership and management, this one is actually worth reading because it is backed by several decades of excellent peer-reviewed..." Read more

"...This would be an excellent book to use for a reading group or a workplace discussion." Read more

124 customers mention "Pacing"100 positive24 negative

Customers find the book well-written and easy to read. They appreciate the succinct, understandable language and premise. The book is described as inspirational, instructional, and well-researched.

"...book I've read all year, for three reasons: it's inspirational, it's instructional, and it's solidly research-based...." Read more

"...It was an absolutely masterful bit of writing. Masterful writing’s characteristic of Adam Grant’s books and Give and Take is no exception...." Read more

"...new books of this young century," and proclaimed it was a book every leader should read. I strongly concur...." Read more

"...Filled with anecdotes to support his research, Give and Take is well-written and fun to read...." Read more

53 customers mention "Giver quality"53 positive0 negative

Customers appreciate the book's insight into the nature and success of givers. They find it a good read for work and home, showing how being a giver can improve work within teams. The book also shows how generosity benefits all, and restores faith in the giver system. Readers mention that givers are excellent collaborators, quick to help others in a team, and have prosocial behaviors.

"...Givers are also excellent collaborators, quick to help others in a team environment and without spending too much time worrying about who gets credit..." Read more

"...peer-reviewed scientific evidence on organizational citizenship, prosocial, and helping behaviors ...." Read more

"...This book is a case for giving: who gives, how to give, and where it takes us. There is one caveat to all this: it has to be authentic...." Read more

"...It provides a compelling argument for the value of collaboration, empathy, and giving in both professional and personal contexts...." Read more

27 customers mention "Success"22 positive5 negative

Customers find the book's approach to business and success helpful. They say it teaches that it's possible to do well by doing good. The book helps them understand themselves and others better.

"...behaviors—whether as givers, takers, or matchers—achieve greater success in the long term...." Read more

"...It worked, my life became better, I became more successful and I gave more. But as a Fact person, it didn’t look logic?..." Read more

"...This "strategy" is the right course of action over the long haul...." Read more

"...help and be our best selves knowing in the end this is the best path to success...." Read more

15 customers mention "Enjoyment"15 positive0 negative

Customers enjoy the book. They find it entertaining and engaging, teaching principles in an easy-to-read way. The book combines entertaining stories of people with scientific studies, making it a pleasure to read.

"...to support his research, Give and Take is well-written and fun to read...." Read more

"...and take action, both consciously and subconsciously--and found it exhilarating and real...." Read more

"...I could not have been more wrong. At every turn, Dr. Grant provides fun and interesting stories and anecdotes..." Read more

"...Finally, the book was a pleasure to read, combining entertaining stories of people with scientific studies that are well referenced at the end...." Read more

12 customers mention "Value for money"12 positive0 negative

Customers find the book provides good value for money. They say it's a great book for value investors and worth every penny.

"...“Being a giver is not good for a 100-yard dash, but it’s valuable in a marathon,” says Chip Conley, founder of Joie de Vivre Hotels...." Read more

"...I found it was also a perfect book for Value Investors, as they are natural givers that appreciate the work they do; and want their partners to..." Read more

"...In sum, I found this book to be excellent and valuable." Read more

"...This book has value for anyone who wants to be a giver and wants to work with other givers...." Read more

80 customers mention "Story length"34 positive46 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the story length. Some find the book's use of stories powerful and true to life, identifying with every chapter. However, others feel the book rambles and contains too many stories and details, making it boring or repetitive.

"I liked the numerous examples in this book. However, it was sometimes confusing and seemed contradictory, usually when some of the examples of..." Read more

"...But what’s in Give and Take matches up with my life experience and is supported by an awful lot of evidence...." Read more

"...Initial Results? Turmoil, distrust, feelings if betrayal, etc...." Read more

"...The first is the stories are great...." Read more

An enlightening perspective on success and helping others
5 out of 5 stars
An enlightening perspective on success and helping others
Give and Take: Why Helping Others Drives Our Success by Adam Grant is an eye-opening book that challenges traditional views of success. Grant explores the idea that success is not solely about self-interest or competition, but rather about helping others and creating a culture of generosity.The book is well-researched, filled with fascinating studies and real-life examples that illustrate how people who engage in helping behaviors—whether as givers, takers, or matchers—achieve greater success in the long term. It provides a compelling argument for the value of collaboration, empathy, and giving in both professional and personal contexts.Grant’s writing style is engaging and thought-provoking, making complex ideas accessible and inspiring. Whether you’re a business professional, educator, or anyone interested in personal growth, Give and Take offers valuable insights on how helping others can lead to greater success and fulfillment.Additionally, the book arrived promptly and in perfect condition. I couldn’t be happier with both the product and the experience.
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Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on April 17, 2013
    Although 2013 is still young, I predict that Give and Take, by Wharton professor Adam Grant, has a great chance of being the best book I've read all year, for three reasons: it's inspirational, it's instructional, and it's solidly research-based.

    The premise of the book is quite simple: the world comprises three types of people: givers, takers and matchers. Which type tends to be most successful? Although we've all been raised on the homily that it's better to give than to receive, the bad news is that the left side of most bell curves is populated by givers, those who contribute more to others than they expect in return. Quite simply, they do less for themselves, people take advantage of them, and they are prone to burnout.

    But the real surprise is that the right side of bell curves is also a givers' neighborhood. Combining extensive research with inspiring examples, Grant shows us how and why successful givers do well for themselves at the same time that they contribute so much to others. Successful givers approach four principal aspects of relationships differently. The four aspects are networking, collaborating, developing talent and communicating.

    Successful givers are excellent networkers, but so are a lot of takers and matchers. The difference is that successful givers proactively do things without expectation of return, creating goodwill and possibly setting an example that may be contagious. One of the excellent tips in this chapter is the suggestion to revive dormant connections. The benefit is that when most people tap into their network for help, their strong ties are trusting and disposed to help, but their weak ties have more diverse information. People you haven't talked to in a long time combine the assets of strong ties and weak ties.

    Givers are also excellent collaborators, quick to help others in a team environment and without spending too much time worrying about who gets credit. They tend to demonstrate what the National Outdoor Leadership School calls expedition behavior, putting the needs of the mission and the team ahead of your own. In the long run, this behavior increases their prestige and the willingness of others to help them when they need it.

    Givers are also excellent at spotting talent, because they're not worried about creating rivals who may outshine them. Also, because they tend to assume competence and talent on the part of others, they may be generating self-fulfilling prophecies. I found this chapter to be rather long on anecdote and thin on evidence, but the next chapter made up for it.

    For me the meatiest chapter covered the successful practices that givers follow in communicating with others, in presenting, selling, and negotiating. Successful givers ask more meaningful questions and have an effective mix of confidence and humility in their advocacy. They also tend to be good at perspective-taking, which is the cognitive equivalent of empathy: instead of feeling what the other person is feeling, they are adept at thinking what they're thinking. In studies, people with high empathy do worse in creating value, because they are more apt to give the other person what they want. Those high in perspective taking are better at coming up with creative ideas to give both sides more of what they want.

    The second section of the book is for those who are too giving, and tend to fall at the bottom of the success distribution because they get taken advantage of and exhaust their energies serving others rather than themselves. The key insight is that self-interest and other-interest are not opposite points on a single line; they are separate axes on a graph. Those who give too much have a high score for other-interest, and a low score for self-interest. Successful givers are at the top right of the graph, combining a high other-focus with high self-interest. As a result, they are in better control of their giving, seeing it as a positive choice rather than an obligation, and being more proactive in allocating their giving time and energy.

    If you get inspired by Grant's book, what you'll really want to know is how to become a more successful giver. The Catch-22 is that giving has to be sincere it it's to work, and if you try to make it strategic it's not sincere. I do think, however, that if you begin changing your behavior for strategic purposes, and start doing more for others, two positive things may happen. First, regardless of the motive, you're contributing to the sum total of benefit and happiness. Even more important is that your attitude may begin to catch up with your actions. The mind does not like cognitive dissonance, so if we're acting in a giving manner we will begin to see ourselves more as givers, leading to a virtuous circle. The book finishes with ten suggestions for becoming more of a giver--I'll keep you posted on how it works.

    The one weakness in the book is that in some of the chapters, as mentioned above, there was less evidence than it seemed on first reading. You get pulled in to the inspiring stories, but on closer reading you don't find enough evidence to be able to make up your mind whether those examples are the rule or the exception.

    Despite this, the message in Grant's book is so powerful that I give it five stars. But it's not a gift--it's truly earned. The book itself is a gift to anyone who reads it, and to countless others who may be on the receiving end of their stepped-up giving.

    Disclaimer: I may be subject to some confirmation bias, because although I don't know Adam Grant personally, I found out about the book through the very complimentary article profiling him in the New York Times Magazine. (Of course, that's one way highly successful givers work their magic..)
    35 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on May 1, 2018
    In the opening pages of Give and Take: Why Helping Others Drives Our Success, Adam Grant says:

    “Every time we interact with another person at work, we have a choice to make: do we try to claim as much value as we can, or contribute value without worrying about what we receive in return?”

    Then Grant defines three characteristic ways of dealing with that choice. “Takers” try to get as much value as they can. They want to come out on top. They want to win. “Givers” are their polar opposite. Givers try to give as much as they can without worrying about what they get back.

    According to Grant, both of those styles are rare and at opposite ends of a continuum. In the middle are what he calls “Matchers.” Matchers worry about a fair exchange. They’re willing to help others, but they also try to protect themselves, and many of their transactions come out even. Which type is most likely to succeed? Here’s Grant:

    “Across occupations, it appears that givers are just too caring, too trusting, and too willing to sacrifice their own interests for the benefit of others. There’s even evidence that compared with takers, on average, givers earn 14 percent less money, have twice the risk of becoming victims of crimes, and are judged as 22 percent less powerful and dominant.”

    Wow. I’ve always thought of myself as a giver. My instinct is to say “Yes” when somebody asks me for something, without worrying too much about what’s in it for me. In fact, one of the hardest things I had to learn during my lifetime was that if I wanted to be successful, I needed to say “No” a lot more. I’ve been taken advantage of many times in my life because of that giving nature. I figured that was okay, though, because I couldn’t see myself really acting like either a taker or a matcher.

    Grant’s statement made me stop and think. The bottom of the pile? I had to stop reading for a while and process what I read. It took a while and a bunch of soul searching, but I finally realized that I was okay with that. If that had to be the cost, then that was the cost. Besides, I thought I’d done pretty well in my life. When I returned to the book, here’s the next thing I read.

    “So if givers are most likely to land at the bottom of the success ladder, who’s at the top—takers or matchers? Neither. When I took another look at the data, I discovered a surprising pattern: It’s the givers again.”

    When Grant outlined the things about the differences between the givers at the top and bottom of the career achievement heap, they matched up well with my life experience. One of the neat things about being 72 is that you’ve got a lot to look back on, and what I realized was that my giver behavior was very different today than it was 50 years ago.

    As I went through the book, I discovered that most of the strategies that Grant talks about to make givers more successful and productive were things that I had learned over my lifetime. It took longer that way. Plus, learning from experience is much more painful than learning from reading. But what’s in Give and Take matches up with my life experience and is supported by an awful lot of evidence.

    I will admit, that as a writing coach, I wanted to applaud Grant for the way he handled that revelation. It was an absolutely masterful bit of writing.

    Masterful writing’s characteristic of Adam Grant’s books and Give and Take is no exception. He tells you what you’ll find in the different chapters, and then supports his points with both story/examples and research. The examples are good, and the research is solid and wide-ranging.

    Whether you decide to change your behavior and become more of a giver or not, you’ll still learn a lot from this book. It’s a good read with good lessons. Grant summarizes many of those lessons in a final chapter called “Actions for Impact.” That chapter has 10 suggestions for specific things that you can do based on what you’ve learned in the book. It is a solid, practical chapter, and gives you a way to experiment with some ideas you might have gotten in the earlier pages.

    In A Nutshell

    In Give and Take: Why Helping Others Drives Our Success, Adam Grant reveals that a life strategy of being a giver as opposed to a taker or a matcher can work for you, but only if you do it in a sensible and intentional way. The book is filled with great examples and the points are supported with research.
    35 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

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  • Renato
    5.0 out of 5 stars Excelente livro
    Reviewed in Brazil on June 8, 2024
    Boas reflexões.
  • garris
    5.0 out of 5 stars Llego perfecto y rápido. Ahora me toca leerlo.
    Reviewed in Mexico on December 18, 2023
    Llego en muy buenas condiciones.
  • Samuel Adebowale
    5.0 out of 5 stars Great companion for personal growth
    Reviewed in Spain on February 5, 2025
    I learnt a lot about myself and many people around me from reading this book. I also picked up essential lessons for optimising my approach to supporting colleagues, friends and family in various endeavours where I have generally considered giving some form of support.
  • Kindle Customer
    5.0 out of 5 stars A Revolutionary book
    Reviewed in India on August 20, 2024
    Thanks Adam for sharing your knowledge.
    This is a must read book. It will really change your perspective regarding people.
  • Frank Calberg
    5.0 out of 5 stars Give and take
    Reviewed in Germany on April 4, 2023
    Takeaways from reading the book:
    - Page 14: Former President of the USA, Abraham Lincoln, was a giver.
    - Page 21: Among the values takers favor are power, dominance, control, and winning.
    - Page 21: Among the values that givers favor are helpfulness, social justice, and compassion.
    - Page 116: When givers receive negative feedback, they accept a blow to their pride and reputations in the short term in order to make better choices in the long term.
    - Page 130: To establish dominance, takers specialize in powerful communication: They speak forcefully, raise their voices to assert their authority, express certainty to project confidence, promote their accomplishments, and sell with conviction and pride. Takers display strength by spreading their arms in dominant poses, raising their eyebrows in challenge, commanding as much physical space as possible, conveying anger and issuing threats when necessary.
    - Page 151: Appearing vulnerable does not bother givers. They worry far less than takers about protecting their egos and projecting certainty. When givers ask for advice, it is because they are genuinely interested in learning from others.