Respond To Two Colleagues D1 – A

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Start With Why
How Great Leaders Inspire Everyone to Take Action

Notes by Frumi Rachel Barr, MBA, Ph.D.

Author: Simon Sinek
Publisher: Penguin Group
Copyright year: 2009
ISBN: 978-1-59184-280-4

Author’s Bio: Simon Sinek teaches leaders and organizations how to inspire people. From members
of Congress to foreign ambassadors, from small businesses to corporations like Microsoft and
American Express, from Hollywood to the UN to the Pentagon, those who want to know how to inspire
people want to learn about The Golden Circle and the power of WHY. Sinek is quoted frequently by
national publications and teaches at the Strategic Communications Program at Columbia University.

Author’s big thought: In studying the leaders who‘ve had the greatest influence in the world, Simon
Sinek discovered that they all think, act, and communicate in the exact same way—and it‘s the
complete opposite of what everyone else does. Sinek calls this powerful idea The Golden Circle, and it
provides a framework upon which organizations can be built, movements can be led, and people can
be inspired. And it all starts with WHY. Starting with WHY works in big business and small business, in
the nonprofit world and in politics.

Those who start with WHY never manipulate, they inspire. And people follow them not because they
have to; they follow because they want to.

Introduction: Why Start with Why?

This book is about a naturally occurring pattern, a way of thinking, acting and communicating
that gives some leaders the ability to inspire those around them.

We can all learn this pattern. With a little discipline, any leader or organization can inspire
others, both inside and outside their organization, to help advance their ideas and their vision.

The individuals and organizations that naturally embody this pattern are the ones that start with
Why.

There are leaders and there are those who lead. With only 6 percent market share in the United
States and about 3 percent worldwide, Apple is not a leading manufacturer of home computers,
yet the company leads the computer industry and is now a leader in other industries as well.

Martin Luther King‘s experiences were not unique, yet he inspired a nation to change.

The Wright brothers were not the strongest contenders in the race to take the first manned,
powered flight, but they led us into a new era of aviation and, in doing so, completely changed
the world we live in.

Their goals were not different than anyone else‘s, and their systems and processes were easily
replicated. Yet the Wright brothers, Apple and Martin Luther King stand out among their peers.

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They stand apart from the norm and their impact is not easily copied. They are members of a
very select group of leaders who do something very, very special. They inspire us.

Great leaders are able to inspire people to act. Those who are able to inspire give people a
sense of purpose or belonging that has little to do with any external incentive or benefit to be
gained. Those who truly lead are able to create a following of people who act not because they
were swayed, but because they were inspired. For those who are inspired, the motivation to act
is deeply personal. They are less likely to be swayed by incentives. Those who are inspired are
willing to pay a premium or endure inconvenience, even personal suffering. Those who are able
to inspire will create a following of people—supporters, voters, customers, workers—who act for
the good of the whole not because they have to, but because they want to.

The organizations and leaders with the natural ability to inspire us all have a disproportionate
amount of influence in their industries. They have the most loyal customers and the most loyal
employees. They tend to be more profitable than others in their industry. They are more
innovative, and most importantly, they are able to sustain all these things over the long term.
Many of them change industries. Some of them even change the world.

PART I: A WORLD THAT DOESN’T START WITH WHY
Chapter 1: Assume You Know

Every instruction we give, every course of action we set, every result we desire, starts with the
same thing: a decision. There are those who decide to manipulate and there are those who start
from somewhere very different. Though both courses of action may yield similar short term
results, it is what we can‘t see that makes long-term success more predictable for only one. The
one that understood why.

Chapter 2: Carrots and Sticks

If you ask most businesses why their customers are their customers, most will tell you it‘s
because of superior quality, features, price or service. In other words, most companies have no
clue why their customers are their customers. This is a fascinating realization. If companies
don‘t know why their customers are their customers, odds are good that they don‘t know why
their employees are their employees either.

There are only two ways to influence human behavior: you can manipulate it or you can inspire
it.

From business to politics, manipulations run rampant in all forms of sales and marketing.
Typical manipulations include: dropping the price; running a promotion; using fear, peer
pressure or aspirational messages; and promising innovation to influence behavior—be it a
purchase, a vote or support.

When companies or organizations do not have a clear sense of why their customers are their
customers, they tend to rely on a disproportionate number of manipulations to get what they
need. And for good reason. Manipulations work.

For transactions that occur an average of once, carrots and sticks are the best way to elicit the
desired behavior. Manipulations are a perfectly valid strategy for driving a transaction, or for
any behavior that is only required once or on rare occasions.

In any circumstance in which a person or organization wants more than a single transaction,
however, if there is a hope for a loyal, lasting relationship, manipulations do not help.

Knowing you have a loyal customer and employee base not only reduces costs, it provides
massive peace of mind. In contrast, relying on manipulations creates massive stress for buyer
and seller alike.

The danger of manipulations is that they work. And because manipulations work, they have
become the norm, practiced by the vast majority of companies and organizations, regardless of
size or industry. With every price drop, promotion, fear-based or aspirational message, and

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novelty we use to achieve our goals, we find our companies, our organizations and our systems
getting weaker and weaker.

The reality is, in today‘s world, manipulations are the norm. But there is an alternative.

PART 2: AN ALTERNATIVE PERSPECTIVE
Chapter 3: The Golden Circle

The Golden Circle concept discussed by the author was inspired by the Golden Ratio—a simple

mathematical relationship that has fascinated mathematicians, biologists, architects, artists,
musicians and naturists since the beginning of history.

The Golden Circle provides compelling evidence of how much more we can achieve if we
remind ourselves to start everything we do by first asking why.

The Golden Circle is an alternative perspective to existing assumptions about why some leaders
and organizations have achieved such a disproportionate degree of influence.

The Golden Circle shows how these leaders were able to inspire action instead of manipulating
people to act.

This alternative perspective is not just useful for changing the world; there are practical
applications for the ability to inspire, too. It can be used as a guide to vastly improving
leadership, corporate culture, hiring, product development, sales, and marketing. It even
explains loyalty and how to create enough momentum to turn an idea into a social movement.

It all starts from the inside out. It all starts with Why.

WHAT: Every single company and organization on the planet knows WHAT they do. Everyone
is easily able to describe the products or services a company sells or the job function they have
within that system.

HOW: Some companies and people know HOW they do WHAT they do. Whether you call them
a ―differentiating value proposition,‖ ―proprietary process‖ or ―unique selling proposition,‖ HOWs
are often given to explain how something is different or better. Many think these are the
differentiating or motivating factors in a decision. WHY: Very few people or companies can
clearly articulate WHY they do WHAT they do.

By WHY Sinek means what is your purpose, cause or belief? WHY does your company exist?
WHY do you get out of bed every morning? And WHY should anyone care?

An inspired leader, every single one of them, regardless of their size or their industry, thinks
acts and communicates from the inside out.

Apple:

Apple‘s success over time is not typical. Their ability to remain one of the most innovative
companies year after year, combined with their uncanny ability to attract a cult-like following,
makes them a great example to demonstrate many of the principles of The Golden Circle.

A marketing message from Apple, if they were like everyone else, might sound like this: We
make great computers. They‘re beautifully designed, simple to use and user-friendly. Wanna
buy one?

This is how most companies create their message. First they start with WHAT they do—―Here‘s
our new car.‖ Then they tell us how they do it or low they are better.

This time, the example starts with WHY:

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o Everything we do, we believe in challenging the status quo. We believe in thinking
differently.

o The way we challenge the status quo is by making our products beautifully designed,
simple to use and user-friendly.

o And we happen to make great computers.
o Wanna buy one?

There is something more, something hard to describe and near impossible to copy that gives
Apple such a disproportionate level of influence in the market. The example starts to prove that
people don‘t buy WHAT you do; they buy WHY you do it.

It‘s worth repeating: people don‘t buy WHAT you do; they buy WHY you do it.

Companies try to sell us WHAT they do, but we buy WHY they do it. This is what Sinek means
when he says they communicate from the outside in; they lead with WHAT and HOW.

It‘s not WHAT Apple does that distinguishes them. It‘s WHY they do it. Their products give life to
their cause.

Their products, unto themselves, are not the reason Apple is perceived as superior; their
products, WHAT Apple makes, serve as the tangible proof of what they believe. It is that clear
correlation between WHAT they do and WHY they do it that makes Apple stand out. This is the
reason we perceive Apple as being authentic. Everything they do works to demonstrate their
WHY, to challenge the status quo. Regardless of the products they make or industry in which
they operate, it is always clear that Apple ―thinks different.‖

Apple‘s WHY, to challenge the status quo and to empower the individual, is a pattern in that it
repeats in all they say and do. It comes to life in their iPod and even more so in iTunes, a
service that challenged the status quo of the music industry‘s distribution model.

Apple did not invent the mp3, nor did they invent the technology that became the iPod, yet they
are credited with transforming the music industry with it.

Apple‘s ―1,000 songs in your pocket‖ told us WHY we needed it.

And it is Apple‘s clarity of WHY that gives them such a remarkable ability to innovate, often
competing against companies seemingly more qualified than they, and succeed in industries
outside their core business.

When an organization defines itself by WHAT it does, that‘s all it will ever be able to do.

Unless Dell, like so many others, can rediscover their founding purpose, cause or belief and
start with WHY in all they say and do, all they will ever do is sell computers. They will be stuck in
their ―core business.‖

Apple‘s WHY was formed at its founding in the late 1970s and hasn‘t changed to this date.
Regardless of the products they make or the industries into which they migrate, their WHY still
remains a constant. And Apple‘s intention to challenge accepted thinking has proved prophetic.

Although their competitors all had a clear sense of WHY at some point, over the course of time,
all of Apple‘s competitors lost their WHY

Any company faced with the challenge of how to differentiate themselves in their market is
basically a commodity, regardless of WHAT they do or HOW they do it.

It is only because Apple‘s WHY is so clear that those who believe what they believe are drawn
to them. Those people who share Apple‘s WHY believe that Apple‘s products are objectively
better, and any attempt to convince them otherwise is pointless.

A simple claim of better, even with the rational evidence to back it up, can create desire and
even motivate a decision to buy, but it doesn‘t create loyalty. It is the cause that is represented
by the company, brand, product or person that inspires loyalty.

Knowing your WHY is not the only way to be successful, but it is the only way to maintain a
lasting success and have a greater blend of innovation and flexibility. When a WHY goes fuzzy,
it becomes much more difficult to maintain the growth, loyalty and inspiration that helped drive
the original success.

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Consider the classic business school case of the railroads. If they had defined themselves as
being in the mass transportation business, perhaps their behavior would have been different.
Perhaps they would have seen opportunities that they otherwise missed. Perhaps they would
own all the airlines today.

In all cases, going back to the original purpose, cause or belief will help these industries adapt.
Instead of asking, ―WHAT should we do to compete?‖ the questions must be asked, ―WHY did
we start doing WHAT we‘re doing in the first place, and WHAT can we do to bring our cause to
life considering all the technologies and market opportunities available today?‖

Chapter 4: This Is Not Opinion, This Is Biology

A very basic human need, the need to belong, is not rational, but it is a constant that exists
across all people in all cultures. It is a feeling we get when those around us share our values
and beliefs. When we feel like we belong, we feel connected and we feel safe. As humans we
crave the feeling and we seek it out. No matter where we go, we trust those with whom we are
able to perceive common values or beliefs.

We want to be around people and organizations who are like us and share our beliefs.

When a company clearly communicates their WHY, what they believe, and we believe what
they believe, then we will sometimes go to extraordinary lengths to include those products or
brands in our lives. This is not because they are better, but because they become markers or
symbols of the values and beliefs we hold dear. Those products and brands make us feel like
we belong and we feel a kinship with others who buy the same things.

The principles of The Golden Circle are much more than a communications hierarchy. Its
principles are deeply grounded in the evolution of human behavior. The power of WHY is not
opinion, it‘s biology. The levels of The Golden Circle correspond precisely with the three major
levels of the brain.

The Neocortex, corresponds with the WHAT level. The Neocortex is responsible for rational and
analytical thought and language. The middle two sections comprise the limbic brain. The limbic
brain is responsible for all of our feelings, such as trust and loyalty. It is also responsible for all
human behavior and all our decision making, but it has no capacity for language.

When we communicate from the outside in, when we communicate WHAT we do first, yes,
people can understand vast amounts of complicated information, like facts and features, but it
does not drive behavior. But when we communicate from the inside out, we‘re talking directly to
the part of the brain that controls decision-making, and our language part of the brain allows us
to rationalize those decisions. The part of the brain that controls our feelings has no capacity for
language. It is this disconnection that makes putting our feelings into words so hard.

When a decision feels right, we have a hard time explaining why we did what we did. Again, the
part of the brain that controls decision-making doesn‘t control language, so we rationalize.

It‘s not that people don‘t know, it‘s that they have trouble explaining why they do what they do.
Decision-making and the ability to explain those decisions exist in different parts of the brain.

Whether you defer to your gut or you‘re imply following your heart, no matter which part of the
body you think is driving the decision, the reality is it‘s all in your limbic brain.

Our limbic brain is powerful, powerful enough to drive behavior that sometimes contradicts our
rational and analytical understanding of a situation. We often trust our gut even if the decision
flies in the face of all the facts and figures.

Our limbic brains are smart and often know the right thing to do. It is our inability to verbalize the
reasons that may cause us to doubt ourselves or trust the empirical evidence when our gut tells
us not to.

Companies that fail to communicate a sense of WHY force us to make decisions with only
empirical evidence. This is why those decisions take more time, feel difficult or leave us

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uncertain. Under these conditions manipulative strategies that exploit our desires, fears, doubts
or fantasies work very well.

Decisions started with WHY—the emotional component of the decision- and then the rational
components allowed the buyer to verbalize or rationalize the reasons for their decision.

This is what we mean when we talk about winning hearts and minds. The heart represents the
limbic, feeling part of the brain, and the mind is the rational, language center.

Absent a WHY, a decision is harder to make. And when in doubt we look to science, to data, to
guide decisions. Companies will tell you that the reason they start with WHAT they do or HOW
they do it is because that‘s what their customers asked for.

Great leaders and great organizations are good at seeing what most of us can‘t see. They are
good at giving us things we would never think of asking for.

Because our biology complicates our ability to verbalize the real reasons why we make the
decisions we do, we rationalize based on more tangible factors, like the design or the service or
the brand. This is the basis for the false assumption that price or features matter more than they
do. Those things matter, they provide us the tangible things we can point to to rationalize our
decision-making. But they don‘t set the course and they don‘t inspire behavior.

As an example, the makers of laundry detergent asked consumers what they wanted from
detergent, and consumers said whiter whites and brighter brights. What the consumers didn‘t
know was that having their clothes smell fresh and clean mattered much more than the
nuanced differences between which detergent actually made clothes measurably cleaner.

The power of the limbic brain is astounding. It not only controls our gut decisions, but it can
influence us to do things that seem illogical or irrational. It is not logic or facts but our hopes and
dreams, our hearts and our guts, that drive us to try new things.

If we were all rational, there would be no small businesses, there would be no exploration, there
would be very little innovation and there would be no great leaders to inspire all those things. It
is the undying belief in something bigger and better that drives that kind of behavior.

For the people who love to work at Apple, even the employees can‘t put it into words. In their
case, their job is one of the WHATs to their WHY. They too are convinced it‘s the quality of the
products alone that is behind Apple‘s success. But deep inside, they all love being a part of
something bigger than themselves. The most loyal Apple employees, like the most loyal Apple
customers, all love a good revolution.

It‘s no accident that the culture at Apple is often described as a cult. It‘s more than just products,
it‘s a cause to support. It‘s a matter of faith.

Products with a clear sense of WHY give people a way to tell the outside world who they are
and what they believe. Remember, people don‘t buy WHAT you do, they buy WHY you do it. If a
company does not have a clear sense of WHY then it is impossible for the outside world to
perceive anything more than WHAT the company does. And when that happens, manipulations
that rely on pushing price, features, service or quality become the primary currency of
differentiation.

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Chapter 5: Clarity, Discipline and Consistency

For The Golden Circle to work, each of the pieces must be in balance and in the right order.

To lead requires those who willingly follow. It requires those who believe n something bigger
than a single issue. To inspire starts with the clarity of WHY.

HOWs are your values or principles that guide HOW to bring your cause to life.

Understanding HOW you do things and, more importantly, having the discipline to hold the
organization and all its employees accountable to those guiding principles enhances an
organization‘s ability to work to its natural strengths. Understanding HOW gives greater ability,
for example, to hire people or find partners who will naturally thrive when working with you.

For values or guiding principles to be truly effective they have to be verbs. It‘s not ―integrity,‖ it‘s
―always do the right thing.‖ It‘s not ―innovation,‖ it‘s ―look at the problem from a different angle.‖
Articulating our values as verbs gives us a clear idea … we have a clear idea of how to act in
any situation.

Everything you say and everything you do has to prove what you believe. A WHY is just a belief.
That‘s all it is. HOWs are the actions you take to realize that belief. And WHATs are the results
of those actions—everything you say and do: your products, services, marketing, PR, culture
and whom you hire.

If people don‘t buy WHAT you do but WHY you do it, then all these things must be consistent.
With consistency people will see and hear, without a shadow of a doubt, what you believe.

After you have clarity of WHY, are disciplined and accountable to your own values and guiding
principles, and are consistent in all you say and do, the final step is to keep it all in the right
order.

Southwest Airlines:
o In the early 1970s, only 15 percent of the traveling population traveled by air. All

Southwest cared about was the other 85 percent. ‗We‘re the champion for the common
man.‖ That was WHY they started the airline.

o Their guiding principles and values stemmed directly from their WHY and were more
common sense than anything else.

o In the 1970s, air travel was expensive, and if Southwest was going to be the champion
for the common man, they had to be cheap, fun and simple. That‘s HOW they did it.
That‘s how they were to champion the cause of the common man. ―You are now free to
move about the country,‖ they said in their advertising. That‘s much more than a tagline.
That‘s a cause. And it‘s a cause looking for followers.

o What Southwest has achieved is the stuff of business folklore. As a result of WHY they
do what they do, and because they are highly disciplined in HOW they do it, they are the
most profitable airline in history.

o There are many ways to motivate people to do things, but loyalty comes from the ability
to inspire people. Only when the WHY is clear and when people believe what you
believe can a true loyal relationship develop.

It‘s when that emotional feeling goes deeper than insecurity or uncertainty or dreams that the
emotional reaction aligns with how we view ourselves. It is at that point that behavior moves
from being motivated to inspired. When we are inspired, the decisions we make have more to
do with who we are and less to do with the companies or the products we‘re buying.

When our decisions feel right, we‘re willing to pay a premium or suffer an inconvenience for
those products or services. This has nothing to do with price or quality. Price, quality, features
and service are important, but they are the cost of entry in business today. It is those visceral
limbic feelings that create loyalty.

When WHY, HOW, and WHAT are in balance authenticity is achieved and the buyer feels
fulfilled. When they are out of balance, stress or uncertainty exists.

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The Golden Circle provides a way to communicate consistent with how individuals receive
information. For this reason an organization must be clear about its purpose, cause or belief and
make sure that everything they say and do is consistent with and authentic to that belief.

If the levels of The Golden Circle are in balance, all those who share the organization‘s view of
the world will be drawn to it and its products like a moth to a light bulb.

People are people and the biology of decision-making is the same no matter whether it is a
personal decision or a business decision.

It is exceedingly difficult to start building a trusting relationship with a potential customer or client
by trying to convince them of all the rational features and benefits. Those things are important,
but they serve only to give credibility to a sales pitch and allow buyers to rationalize their
purchase decision.

The ability to put a WHY into words provides the emotional context for decisions. It offers
greater confidence than ―I think it‘s right.‖ It‘s more scalable than ―I feel it‘s right.‖ When you
know your WHY, the highest level of confidence you can offer is, ―I know it‘s right.‖ When you
know the decision is right, not only does it feel right, but you can also rationalize it and easily put
it into words. The decision is fully balanced.

The rational WHATs offer proof for the feeling of VHY. If you can verbalize the feeling that drove
the gut decision, if you can clearly state your WHY, you‘ll provide a clear context for those
around you to understand why that decision was made. If the decision is consistent with the
facts and figures, then those facts and figures serve to reinforce the decision—this is balance.
And if the decision flies in the face and figures then it will highlight the other factors that need to
be considered. It can turn a controversial decision from a debate into a discussion.

The goal of business should not be to do business with anyone who simply wants what you
have. It should be to focus on the people who believe what you believe. When we are selective
about doing business only with those who believe in our WHY, trust emerges.

PART 3: LEADERS NEED A FOLLOWING
Chapter 6: The Emergence of Trust

Trust does not emerge simply because a seller makes a rational case why the customer should
buy a product or service, or because an executive promises change. Trust is not a checklist.
Fulfilling all your responsibilities does not create trust. Trust is a feeling, not a rational
experience.

We trust some people and companies even when things go wrong, and we don‘t trust others
even though everything might have gone exactly as it should have. A completed checklist does
not guarantee trust. Trust begins to emerge when we have a sense that another person or
organization is driven by things other than their own self-gain.

With trust comes a sense of value—real value, not just value equated with money. Value, by
definition, is the transference of trust. You can‘t convince someone you have value, just as you
can‘t convince someone to trust you. You have to earn trust by communicating and
demonstrating that you share the same values and beliefs.

You have to talk about your WHY and prove it with WHAT you do.

Leading means that others willingly follow you—not because they have to, not because they are
paid to, but because they want to. Those who lead are able to do so because those who follow
trust that the decisions made at the top have the best interest of the group at heart. In turn,
those who trust work hard because they feel like they are working for something bigger …

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