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  • Start with Why: How Great Leaders Inspire Everyone to Take Action
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4.6 out of 5 stars
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Start with Why: How Great Leaders Inspire Everyone to Take Action

Start with Why: How Great Leaders Inspire Everyone to Take Action

bySimon Sinek
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Top positive review

Positive reviews›
John H. Hwung
5.0 out of 5 starsA MASTER book of other books!!!
Reviewed in the United States on August 7, 2012
THIS IS THE GREATEST BOOK EVER PUBLISHED IN THE LAST 10 YEARS!!!

If I could give this book 10 stars, I would! This book beats many other books. This book is so exciting to read that I read it three times! The beginning of the book said it extremely well -- This book is about an unique kind of leadership that has the natural recurring pattern of inspiring, influencing and affecting people. It is about a very small group of leaders that achieve disproportionate amount of influences in their industries/areas compare to other leaders. The most prominent example is, of course, Steve Jobs who displayed a recurring pattern of changing one industry after another.

(Of all the books that study Steve Jobs, this is probably the best one although it is not a book on Jobs' biography. However, this book offers the best angle to understand his motivation and influence.)

The core of this book is about the kind of WHYs that a special kind of leaders has that enable them to have the natural recurring pattern of inspiring, influencing and changing people and industries. The prime examples of this kind of leaders quoted in this book are Steve Jobs, Martin Luther King, Jr., and the Wright Brothers.

This book is revolutionary. All the top business schools should reevaluate their curriculum based on this book! All the top business consultants should reconsider their theories and recommendations based on this book! All the writers on leadership should read this book and revise their theories! All political leaders in the world should read this book! All board of directors of corporations should read this book and learn how to select the next CEOs! ...

This book can be considered the MASTER book to be read before reading books like "From Good to Great", "Stall Points", "The Innovator's Dilemma" and the follow-on books, "Crossing the Chasm" ...

The central theme of this book is WHY -- the essence, the core, the purpose of a person's life, of leadership, and the starting point of a corporation. Without the clarity of this WHY, the life of a person, the leadership, and the products and services offered by a corporation are all fuzzy and treated as commodities. This is so very true. Look around us: Though we (persons, organizations and corporations) are special in some ways, yet we are almost all commodities -- except the very few that display the recurring pattern of major changes and influences such as Jobs, Apple and Google. These are the ones that have the clarity of WHY and the discipline of diligently and strictly enforcing their HOWs (principles, methods, criteria) in producing the WHATs (behaviors, products and services).

There are three views of WHY + HOW + WHAT presented in this book:
1. Looking from the top -- the WHY in the center, the HOW in the middle and the WHAT in the outer layer form a GOLDEN CIRCLE.
2. Looking from the side -- the WHY at the top layer, the HOW in the middle layer and the WHAT in the bottom layer form a cone.
3. Viewing in three dimensions -- with the external world attached to the base of WHAT, the whole thing is a megaphone for the leader or corporation to sound out its WHY.

These views are wonderful ways for us to look at leadership, to understand the life cycle of a corporation, and summarily see why companies thrived and why they died. These views can even be applied to our personal lives.

Of course, this book has some blemishes. But these defects do not distract from its greatness.
1. The grammar is terrible. The whole book should be reviewed by a competent editor.
2. The WHYs are not strictly examined and evaluated. This book treats all WHYs from leaders, entrepreneurs and corporations as equal when in fact they are not. Probably most of the WHYs are the rewording of WHATs in disguise. Maybe a lot of WHYs are re-branded HOWs. Perhaps only a small number of WHYs can have the recurring pattern of inspiration and influence. I hope the future editions of this book can elucidate this point.
3. The HOWs gets much less treatment than the WHYs and WHATs in the book. It would be great if this topic is covered in more detail.
4. Maybe 60% of this book is about corporations and not on leadership as claimed in the beginning of the book. I hope the author can focus more on the recurring pattern of inspiration and influence of leadership.
5. Not everything stated in this book is correct. The points discussed in this book about Jobs and Apple are good examples. Please read "Inside Apple" and Jobs biographies for more correct views on Jobs and Apple.

At the first reading, the book seems repetitious. The WHY, HOW and WHAT get repeated over and over. However, on the 2nd and 3rd reading, this apparent repetition disappears and you can see the different points that the author was trying to emphasize.

I would like to recommend some future topics or books for Simon Sinek:
a) Qualify and rank levels of WHYs -- not all WHYs are equal. Probably some are top-notch while most are mediocre. Also, tell us how to construct best kinds of WHYs.
b) Compare the WHYs to big tech companies, the WHYs of big Wall Street firms (if they have any???) and the WHYs of big retail companies.
c) Compare the WHYs of big empires in history
d) Compare the WHYs of nations in WWI and WWII
e) Compare the WHYs of great leaders in history
f) Compare the WHYs of great geniuses
g) Consider how WHYs can be incorporated into Teachers' College (Ed College). It is the teachers who educate our future generations. They need to be thoroughly immersed in the understanding of The Golden Circle, The Cone and The Megaphone.
h) Consider how WHYs can be incorporated into the K-12 and the college education
g) Consider how WHYs can be incorporated into and how HOWs can be enforced in our political systems. We have far too many politicians and not enough true leaders
i) Consider how WHYs can be incorporated into our law schools. Our lawyers really need a strong dose of treatment.

In summary, this book is dynamic. It's a dynamite! It's the best book I have read in the last 10 years!
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Top critical review

Critical reviews›
Morphenius
3.0 out of 5 starsAt once a brilliant must-read and painfully redundant
Reviewed in the United States on May 28, 2010
I really had to struggle with what rating to give this. Simon Sinek's idea is astoundingly insightful, very helpful, and definitely worth the price of this book let alone the Kindle price. I'm inclined to think that the world would be considerably better off if more people lived by Sinek's simple idea.

On the other hand, the book is agonizing in its redundancy, often repeating the same examples many times over to make precisely the same point as the first time the example was used. I'm inclined to think that virtually everything Sinek wrote could have been stated in a 20-page article without leaving out anything important. I daresay it might be possible to do it in five pages. That's part of the beauty of the idea: it's incredibly simple while still being astoundingly powerful. But Sinek doesn't seem to have bothered taking the time to distill the idea down into its essence for straightforward presentation in this book. It reads a little bit like he took articles from his blog, stuck them in a large word-processing document, did some minor editing, and submitted the thing as-is for publication in order to create this book.

So, the idea is worth the cost of the book and the time to read it, but the book itself is, in my humble opinion, very poorly organized and needlessly long.

I would advise those who are interested in Sinek's ideas save themselves a great deal of time and a little expense by first watching his TED Talk:

[...]

This covers virtually all the core ideas involved. The one thing Sinek never does either in this presentation or in his book is spell out what "HOW" is. It's a bit confusing in large part because it's different for each of the two communication structures. In the "WHAT --> HOW" structure, "HOW" is "how we're different"; for instance, Dell has to argue that its computers are somehow better than (say) HP's and therefore specifies HOW they're better in order to compete against HP. On the other hand, in the "WHY --> HOW --> WHAT" structure, "HOW" is "how we enact our purpose (i.e. our 'WHY')".

As far as I can tell, if you're reasonably intelligent you can glean pretty much everything essential to Sinek's idea based on his TED Talk together with this understanding that "HOW" means something different in each of the two contexts he contrasts.

What you WON'T get from that is his rather in-depth, incredibly clear exposé of why the "WHAT --> HOW" communication pattern requires manipulating people to some degree or another and why that is by necessity unsustainable in the long run. That's not core to his point but it's certainly a nice supplement.

So in short, the book is a reasonable buy, certainly at the Kindle price, but do consider benefitting from Sinek's wisdom for free in 20 minutes first by watching his TED Talk. If you want more details, you can get the book, but understand that you're not likely to learn much more than what you could have figured out on your own between the talk and what I mention above.
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From the United States

David Plotkin
2.0 out of 5 stars See the TED talk; save the money
Reviewed in the United States on March 23, 2017
Verified Purchase
The author's TED talk is one of the most-viewed ever; and it's really quite good. In fact, it's so good that you don't need to read this book! He takes a very, very simple concept and expands, and expands, and repeats, and seemingly never edits, and then repeats, and expands, and -- well, you get the idea. The whole thing could've been done in 50 pages or less.
Example: Yes, there's a difference between WHAT one does in business and WHY one does it. And sometimes they diverge. He calls this the "Split" and has a graphic and whole chapter on it. Really?? Not needed.
Example: He mines the stories of Apple, Wal-Mart, Costco, Starbucks, Martin Luther King Jr, and a few others - over & over & over & over & over again. He makes elementary and generalized statements, such as saying that NONE of the 250,000 people who came to hear Dr. King in Washington came for him; no sir, they came for themselves because their "why" connected with his "why." Uh, no; many came for him and his message or to simply support civil rights.
Example: He constantly repeats the words WHY and WHAT in CAPS ALL THE TIME so you'd get the message. And then again....and again.....
Example: Yes, the Apple Computer story is inspiring. But among all that WHY stuff is also the story of a dreamer with incredibly bad people skills. To simply elevate the Apple story - and retell it umpteen times - is to vastly oversimplify what made them great back then and now, and why they succeeded in spite of the way Jobs treated his employees.
It's almost as if the author had about 10 stories in his pocket and decided to use nothing else at all. He created the entire "start with WHY" mantra out of the 10 stories and never went beyond them to augment, embellish, or create more learnings.
So save the money, see the TED talk, and take what he says there to heart. WHY is the basis for being motivated. But there's a whole lot more to say, and sadly, he never gets to it.
681 people found this helpful
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B. Weibel
2.0 out of 5 stars It's a lot of small talk, but nothing profound.
Reviewed in the United States on October 8, 2021
Verified Purchase
It's a lot of small talk. It's those phrases you've heard in advertisements but repeated back to you without a new meaning. You use the word "breeds" to describe the term "loyalty" in relation to "brands." "Brands" are not "breeds." A company has an organization format and workflow for the products and new products. Any person wears a brand, and often a person chooses a particular brand for the meaning associated with the brand. A component of a human mind is attached to the meaning an item would relate to: any mind is not generally composed to prefer a bloodline. You choose an item of a brand for the meaning just like the person is chosen for the result it provides: that meaning is not a bloodline but a cohesive holistic meaning in either case. You might pick a pair of Docker's dress pants because you like the cotton dress pants with pleats. You might pick a brand because it's reliable or puts the person using the item in a new context: the person identified with this item whose name you don't know. Items have values, but those values aren't - are you put it - a "breed."
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Shana
2.0 out of 5 stars It can be summed up in a few sentences...
Reviewed in the United States on May 10, 2023
Verified Purchase
I cannot recommend this book. He mostly talks about making sure that there is a reason (a why) behind everything that you do. He mentions Apple, Walmart, Harley D, etc. multiple times in the book. It is very redundant. I would recommend that you watch a short youtube or TedTalk on this subject and save your time.
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Joel
2.0 out of 5 stars Book appears to be used
Reviewed in the United States on December 18, 2022
Verified Purchase
Would it have been for me i wouldnt mind but the fact that it's a Christmas gift for a colleague really disappointed specialy so close to Christmas. You can clearly see the creases in the binding and on the cover and that it has been creased several times. Would I have wanted used I would have bought a used one but the whole point was for it to be new as a gift set of 3 of Simon Sinek books.
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Joel
2.0 out of 5 stars Book appears to be used
Reviewed in the United States on December 18, 2022
Would it have been for me i wouldnt mind but the fact that it's a Christmas gift for a colleague really disappointed specialy so close to Christmas. You can clearly see the creases in the binding and on the cover and that it has been creased several times. Would I have wanted used I would have bought a used one but the whole point was for it to be new as a gift set of 3 of Simon Sinek books.
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Area Man
2.0 out of 5 stars Another Unified Theory of Business that goes sideways fast
Reviewed in the United States on June 1, 2021
Verified Purchase
Classic example of how to take a good idea that has natural limits, add megalomania and ignorance, and emerge with THE UNIFIED THEORY OF EVERYTHING. The sections on MLK and the civil rights movement particularly were so palm-to-forehead inducing (and insulting to those involved) for anyone who knows anything about history.

Sinek is a great lifeguard for the shallow end of the pool, but parables from a handful of companies and individuals are just the illusion of evidence based practice. Sinek wants to "inspire": that's his "Why". For me I guess, I find it hard to get inspired by someone who doesn't care much about nuance. Broad strokes work for plenty of folks though, so good for him building a "Why Empire" out of it.

Sinek is the smart but lazy friend who has some interesting ideas to chat about, but he never seems to put in the work to really develop them into anything more than mildly thought provoking chats over a beer or two.
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Margaret
2.0 out of 5 stars Had to get the book for class
Reviewed in the United States on November 23, 2022
Verified Purchase
Had to get the book for class so that might influence why I don't like it. I am also not big on self-help books. It is outdated and the author is incapable of making a clear and concise point. He also doesn't have any evidence to backup his points. The first half of the book sounds like an ad for apple.
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Kate
2.0 out of 5 stars Good Concept - Incredibly Repetitive and Difficult to Read
Reviewed in the United States on September 1, 2022
Verified Purchase
This book was recommended as part of our Leadership Book Club. I had the most difficult time slogging through it. The concept makes sense and is somewhat decent, but the way it's written is so unnecessarily repetitive and it almost feels like brainwashing, when the reality more likely that the author was trying to reach a certain word/page count. Reading this in 2022, it hasn't aged well. Lastly, the book is about starting with Why, but doesn't tell you how to do that - you have to buy that book separately.
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Nicolas Huete
2.0 out of 5 stars A nut of content hidden in a mattress of fluff
Reviewed in the United States on November 13, 2022
Verified Purchase
People make decisions based on personal values and allegiances. Align to those or instill new ones to build loyalty to your brand/leadership/whatever.

Add 329 pages of anecdotes about MLK and Apple (without supporting references) and that’s the whole book.
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LPearson
2.0 out of 5 stars Great Concept, Arduous Presentation
Reviewed in the United States on October 14, 2018
Verified Purchase
I bought this book because I had seen the Sinek "Why" Ted Talk. I wanted to learn more about the "Start with Why" concept. While the book does explain the concept in great detail, it could have been presented with much less text. There are far too many repetitive examples and the content is unnecessarily drawn out. This is one of the poorest written books I have every read. It's as though he had to write a certain number of pages and was just trying to fill space. My advice would be to watch the Ted Talks and pass on the book. I bought a second book by Sinek at the same time as I bought this one, It is being returned. I should have returned this one. Save yourself some frustration and heed the advice to not purchase this book. Opt to watch the Sinek Ted Talks instead. Keep your money and time!
87 people found this helpful
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Fabricio
2.0 out of 5 stars Basic and oversimplified
Reviewed in the United States on January 7, 2021
Verified Purchase
Everything has a why and people are not stupid, but the book makes it seem as a big secret and how focus on profit and performance is not sustainable, which is not entirely true. A lot of people work to make money and maintain their lifestyles and simply don't care about the purpose of their employer. Also, there are businesses that had a vision when they were founded and today they simply exist to make money and that's all. Simon Sinek doesn't seem to have the experience he needed to talk about leadership and business management to the level he talks. It’s more self branding than experience.
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