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Start With Why by Simon Sinek - June 2013
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Aradia
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Jun 21, 2013 06:15AM

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We like Devil's Advocates, otherwise the club would become quite boring.
The "why" is tricky. It is not that you have a "why," but do I and others get it. I think everyone has a "why," but not everyone gets it and trusts it.
Also, it takes a long time to get people's "why" and that's why no one leads with it. It is much easier and faster for people to tell you what they do rather than why they do what they do.
For you to get my "why" you will have to know me for a while and see that I am genuine and live by my "why" before you start trusting me. At least that is how I understand it.

I agree that Costco employees are very satisfied and like their job. The company has made it very simple for them: take care of customers, give them a good deal and find a way to keep then in the store as long as you can. I speak from experience. Most stores I am in and out, but not Costco.
Costco does things that drive analysts on WS mad and that is they take good care of their employees. Even the CEO's salary is lower than other CEOs so employees are paid well with benefits. The result is that their stock price keeps going higher since they have real loyal customers (like me) who keep buying from them.
So you know a company is a WHY-type when it pisses off Wall Street. Why others can't copy them is a real mystery?

We like Devil's Advocates, otherwise the club would become quite boring.
The "why" is tricky. It is not that you have a "why," but do I and others get it. I think everyone has a "why,"..."
I agree I think it is a little tricky and that the WHY should come out in the what and how you do it. The What and How speak for your why.
I also think there is a place for everything. Different conversations, different communications. The biggest lesson seems to be to have, remember, and live your WHY. I think communicating it is done primarily via your What and How.

Great approach, Jacob. To continue your exercise of why I am involved in my work: it's actually for getting people to understand why they're doing what they do.
It's a bit cyclical, but my work in organizational culture gets to a similar point.

We like Devil's Advocates, otherwise the club would become quite boring.
The "why" is tricky. It is not that you have a "why," but do I and others get it. I think everyone ..."
After reading through the part of the book that talks about culture I think we have to realize that sometimes you're why it's not going to spark alignment with other people's why. At times there may be a conflict or just not interested. But other times it will spark a powerful conversation and alignment.

We like Devil's Advocates, otherwise the club would become quite boring.
The "why" is tricky. It is not that you have a "why," but do I and others get it. I think everyone ..."
After reading through the part of the book that talks about culture I think we have to realize that sometimes you're why it's not going to spark alignment with other people's why. At times there may be a conflict or just not interested. But other times it will spark a powerful conversation and alignment.



When people focus on the HOW and WHAT, it results in stress. You are doing work and making money but there is no purpose and feel something lacking. I am not a stress expert but would like to know what others think.
I know I have done my best work when I made little money but had lot of control, and was not very happy when I made lot of money working for a boss I did not like and company's culture that I didn't feel comfortable with.

"Startups succeed when it has WHY-type and HOW-types" -http://bit.ly/1bXs1vh
"The Anatomy of a 'Start with Why' from the movie 'Jerry Maguire' " - http://bit.ly/145g7y5
I really enjoyed reading this book. This was my second reading. It certainly made me think as I came up with five blogs. It was work, but well worth it.

Simon, thanks for your prompt replies. We like authors who are actively participating in the discussion; it makes the reading experience more enriching.
Reading this book, I r..."
Jay - let me answer your questions in reverse order.
Yes, when people ask "what do you do?" absolutely answer with Why. Here's the difference:
Traditional:
What do you do?
I am an author and I do a lot of speaking. Usually about what inspires people.
Start With Why:
What do you do?
I wake up every single day to inspire people to do what inspires them. I do all kinds of things to help advance that - I wrote a book on the subject, I speak, I teach...whatever it takes to inspire.
As for the second question - again, your instincts are right. Why is about meaning and meaning cannot be found in a soundbite or two. Meaning is under the surface and takes time to uncover. What we do, our soundbites, in contrast, are superficial and easily seen and thus much easier to talk about.
Discovering Why takes curiosity and patience.

When a person or a company has a brand, does that mean that people viscerally get their WHY? Or can branding be created through PR?"
People communicate out loud with their mouths. Companies communicate with marketing. The things we say to each other can be helpful or unhelpful, we can inspire or manipulate for self-gain.
Branding is one element of marketing. It is the sum total of what the company stands for. If that brand is authentic - if it properly represents the Why of the company - that is good and true and long-lasting. If they brand built is one of attempting to please or ingratiate, then it won't stand the test of time.
I talk about what authentic branding is in this talk I gave. You may enjoy it.
http://vimeo.com/26774102

"Ask Why?"
One question that no one asked and it was right there for all to see."
Very good point Jay.

Does "why" only matters in business when a company faces competition? Airlines used to care about this but with consolidation and lack of competition, worrying about "why has ..."
I think that Why applies whether or not a company faces competition (although there are very few who do not). As Simon points out many companies are focused on the now and the what and totally miss the why.

I would have to say from my observations over the years that most people do not know the difference. There is a small cadre that is loyal, but the majority will split after a couple of frustrating experiences without relaying their frustration.

I just posted my final blog post that explains how I did it. In total, I produced eight blogs from this exercise. It was work, but I found it very enriching.
http://bit.ly/10pr78W

One chain opens up a 24 hour pharmacy to gain a competitive advantage . The store loses money because it requires double the overhead to do 20% more volume. Within a year every competitor has added 24 hour hour pharmacies because they don't want to be left behind and now they are all losing money.
My big why question is why is it that so few business leaders have the guts to run their business correctly?

Great insight Greg!

The missing piece that I see in this argument is POWER. Corporations are not communes. The power begins at the top and remains there in most US corporations. Albeit, while many companies are now realizing the power of distributive leadership, the real power still resides at the top of a hierarchical pyramid. In this type of organizational culture, personhood within the corporation resides only in those who have a real voice in the company's operations. Most employees, I would say, do not have a role in determining either the why, or what. They can help determine a piece of the 'how', but only insofar as it directly relates to their job description.


Would love to hear what you all think of this approach.
"Global Leaders Young Entrepreneurs Competition
The format for the Global Leaders Young Entrepreneur Competition has been adapted from The Golden Circle by Simon Sinek. The premise of The Golden Circle is that any great idea that ultimately becomes a movement starts with WHY. In it’s simplest form, WHY is the purpose, or the reason something exists. It’s the inspiration and meaning– it’s what grabs people. Any successful business plan addresses 3 basic questions: WHY are we doing this? HOW are we doing this? WHAT are we doing?"