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Peter Thiel’s Zero To One : Book Notes

For any book discussion

vinylawesome

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Zero To One is an exercise in thinking. It’s about questioning and rethinking received wisdom in order to create the future.
peter-thiel.jpg


Here are eight lessons I took away from the book:

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


1. Like Heraclitus, who said that you can only step into the same river once, Thiel believes that each moment in business happens only once.

"The next Bill Gates will not build an operating system. The next Larry Page or Sergey Brin won’t make a search engine. And the next Mark Zuckerberg won’t create a social network. If you are copying these guys, you aren’t learning from them.

Of course, it’s easier to copy a model than to make something new. Doing what we already know how to do takes the world from 1 to n, adding more of something familiar. But every time we create something new, we go from 0 to 1. The act of creation is singular, as is the moment of creation, and the result is something fresh and strange."


2. There is no formula for innovation.

"The paradox of teaching entrepreneurship is that such a formula (for innovation) cannot exist; because every innovation is new and unique, no authority can prescribe in concrete terms how to be more innovative. Indeed, the single most powerful pattern I have noticed is that successful people find value in unexpected places, and they do this by thinking about business from first principles instead of formulas."

3. The best interview question you can ask.

"Whenever I interview someone for a job, I like to ask this question: “What important truth do very few people agree with you on?”

This is a question that sounds easy because it’s straightforward. Actually, it’s very hard to answer. It’s intellectually difficult because the knowledge that everyone is taught in school is by definition agreed upon. And it’s psychologically difficult because anyone trying to answer must say something she knows to be unpopular. Brilliant thinking is rare, but courage is in even shorter supply than genius.

Most commonly, I hear answers like the following:

“Our educational system is broken and urgently needs to be fixed.”

“America is exceptional.”

“There is no God.”

These are bad answers. The first and the second statements might be true, but many people already agree with them. The third statement simply takes one side in a familiar debate. A good answer takes the following form: “Most people believe in x, but the truth is the opposite of x.”


What does this have to do with the future?

"In the most minimal sense, the future is simply the set of all moments yet to come. But what makes the future distinctive and important isn’t that it hasn’t happened yet, but rather that it will be a time when the world looks different from today. … Most answers to the contrarian questions are different ways of seeing the present; good answers are as close as we can come to looking into the future."

4. A new company’s most important strength

"Properly defined, a startup is the largest group of people you can convince of a plan to build a different future. A new company’s most important strength is new thinking: even more important than nimbleness, small size affords space to think."

5. The first step to thinking clearly

Our contrarian question – What important truth do very few people agree with you on? — is difficult to answer directly. It may be easier to start with a preliminary: what does everybody agree on?”

“Madness is rare in individuals
—but in groups, parties, nations and ages it is the rule.”
— Nietzche (before he went mad)


If you can identify a delusional popular belief, you can find what lies hidden behind it: the contrarian truth.

[…]

Conventional beliefs only ever come to appear arbitrary and wrong in retrospect; whenever one collapses we call the old belief a bubble, but the distortions caused by bubbles don’t disappear when they pop. The internet bubble of the ‘90s was the biggest of the last two decades, and the lessons learned afterward define and distort almost all thinking about technology today. The first step to thinking clearly is to question what we think we know about the past."

Here is an example Thiel gives to help illuminate this idea.

"The entrepreneurs who stuck with Silicon Valley learned four big lessons from the dot-com crash that still guide business thinking today:

1. Make incremental advances — “Grand visions inflated the bubble, so they should not be indulged. Anyone who claims to be able to do something great is suspect, and anyone who wants to change the world should be more humble. Small, incremental steps are the only safe path forward.”

2. Stay lean and flexible — “All companies must be lean, which is code for unplanned. You should not know what your business will do; planning is arrogant and inflexible. Instead you should try things out, iterate, and treat entrepreneurship as agnostic experimentation.”

"3. Improve on the competition — “Don’t try to create a new market prematurely. The only way to know that you have a real business is to start with an already existing customer, so you should build your company by improving on recognizable products already offered by successful competitors.”

4. Focus on product, not sales - “If your product requires advertising or salespeople to sell it, it’s not good enough: technology is primarily about product development, not distribution. Bubble-era advertising was obviously wasteful, so the only sustainable growth is viral growth.”

These lessons have become dogma in the startup world; those who would ignore them are presumed to invite the justified doom visited upon technology in the great crash of 2000. And yet the opposite principles are probably more correct.

1. It is better to risk boldness than triviality.
2. A bad plan is better than no plan.
3. Competitive markets destroy profits.
4. Sales matters just as much as product.”

To build the future we need to challenge the dogmas that shape our view of the past. That doesn’t mean the opposite of what is believed is necessarily true, it means that you need to rethink what is and is not true and determine how that shapes how we see the world today. As Thiel says, “The most contrarian thing of all is not to oppose the crowd but to think for yourself."

6. Progress comes from monopoly, not competition.

"The problem with a competitive business goes beyond lack of profits. Imagine you’re running one of those restaurants in Mountain View. You’re not that different from dozens of your competitors, so you’ve got to fight hard to survive. If you offer affordable food with low margins, you can probably pay employees only minimum wage. And you’ll need to squeeze out every efficiency: That is why small restaurants put Grandma to work at the register and make the kids wash dishes in the back.

A monopoly like Google is different. Since it doesn’t have to worry about competing with anyone, it has wider latitude to care about its workers, its products and its impact on the wider world. Google’s motto—”Don’t be evil”—is in part a branding ploy, but it is also characteristic of a kind of business that is successful enough to take ethics seriously without jeopardizing its own existence. In business, money is either an important thing or it is everything. Monopolists can afford to think about things other than making money; non-monopolists can’t. In perfect competition, a business is so focused on today’s margins that it can’t possibly plan for a long-term future. Only one thing can allow a business to transcend the daily brute struggle for survival: monopoly profits.

So a monopoly is good for everyone on the inside, but what about everyone on the outside? Do outsize profits come at the expense of the rest of society? Actually, yes: Profits come out of customers’ wallets, and monopolies deserve their bad reputation—but only in a world where nothing changes.

In a static world, a monopolist is just a rent collector. If you corner the market for something, you can jack up the price; others will have no choice but to buy from you. Think of the famous board game: Deeds are shuffled around from player to player, but the board never changes. There is no way to win by inventing a better kind of real-estate development. The relative values of the properties are fixed for all time, so all you can do is try to buy them up.

But the world we live in is dynamic: We can invent new and better things. Creative monopolists give customers more choices by adding entirely new categories of abundance to the world. Creative monopolies aren’t just good for the rest of society; they’re powerful engines for making it better."

7. Rivalry causes us to overemphasize old opportunities and slavishly copy what has worked in the past.

Marx and Shakespeare provide two models that we can use to understand almost every kind of conflict.

"According to Marx, people fight because they are different. The proletariat fights the bourgeoisie because they have completely different ideas and goals (generated, for Marx, by their very different material circumstances). The greater the difference, the greater the conflict.

To Shakespeare, by contrast, all combatants look more or less alike. It’s not at all clear why they should be fighting since they have nothing to fight about. Consider the opening to Romeo and Juliet: “Two households, both alike in dignity.” The two houses are alike, yet they hate each other. They grow even more similar as the feud escalates. Eventually, they lose sight of why they started fighting in the first place.”

In the world of business, at least, Shakespeare proves the superior guide. Inside a firm, people become obsessed with their competitors for career advancement. Then the firms themselves become obsessed with their competitors in the marketplace. Amid all the human drama, people lose sight of what matters and focus on their rivals instead.

[…]

Rivalry causes us to overemphasize old opportunities and slavishly copy what has worked in the past."

8. Last can be first

"You’ve probably heard about “first mover advantage”: if you’re the first entrant into a market, you can capture significant market share while competitors scramble to get started. That can work, but moving first is a tactic, not a goal. What really matters is generating cash flows in the future, so being the first mover doesn’t do you any good if someone else comes along and unseats you. It’s much better to be the last mover – that is, to make the last great development in a specific market and enjoy years or even decades of monopoly profits.

Grandmaster José Raúl Capablanca put it well: to succeed, “you must study the endgame before everything else.”


Source: http://www.farnamstreetblog.com/2014/09/peter-thiel-zero-to-one/
 
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csalvato

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I would read a summary of a book by a novice, like Four Hour Workweek or Blink.

I always make sure to read the full version of books by and about billionaires, like Zero to One or the autobiography of Benjamin Franklin.

I want to think like the big boys. So I read the full version and try and get in their head.

I am a slow reader and Zero to One only took me two days of light reading and was worth EVERY FREAKING MINUTE.
 
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Iwokeup

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What's with every one talking about this book on the forum, is it really that good, will I learn a lot from it, I have already read so much, Iworkup if you would like to do a detailed summary of the book, I would love to read that summary, feel free to be as detailed as you like. If not that's totally cool as well.
Are you kidding me?

Look mate, I'm pretty busy too. Just finishing night shift (7p-7a) ten of ten.

That means 120 hours of balls to the wall patient care in 240 total hours. I'm exhausted when I get home.
.
.
.
.
I'm making time to read the damned book.

Just think of the excitement you'll feel when the book arrives in your mailbox! You'll get your drink, sit down, open the cover, and then you'll begin to see for yourself what everyone is talking about.

Good luck!
 

pickeringmt

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is it really that good, will I learn a lot from it
Dude just read the books

These people pour years of knowledge and experience into a book over countless hours, and you can't be bothered with committing less than 10 hours to read it?

Sorry, but it always kills me when people complain about reading. I come from a complete vacuum in terms of success, and books have been my number one tool for pulling myself out of it. I bet you the majority of people out there are maybe 3-5 decent books away from being able to pursue every goal you can imagine. Tell them this and they say, "I just don't have time to read...."

Bullshit

I can 100% GUARANTEE you that you share the exact same number of hours in a day as guys like Bill Gates and Warren Buffet - who, by the way, credit much of their success to reading voraciously. Warren Buffet says he reads 8 hours a day.

"But he's rich, he has time to read" No, he is rich because he made time to do what counts - like investing in himself

The absolute cheapest/biggest ROI investment you can make in yourself is books.

Seriously, the reader puts the least amount of effort into a book, and gains the most value. If it is too much for you to read it, go get an audible membership and you can have somebody read it to you. I recommend both.

Sorry for the rant, but I have no patience for this anymore - its not just you
 
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vinylawesome

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Dude just read the books

These people pour years of knowledge and experience into a book over countless hours, and you can't be bothered with committing less than 10 hours to read it?

Sorry, but it always kills me when people complain about reading. I come from a complete vacuum in terms of success, and books have been my number one tool for pulling myself out of it. I bet you the majority of people out there are maybe 3-5 decent books away from being able to pursue every goal you can imagine. Tell them this and they say, "I just don't have time to read...."

Bullshit

I can 100% GUARANTEE you that you share the exact same number of hours in a day as guys like Bill Gates and Warren Buffet - who, by the way, credit much of their success to reading voraciously. Warren Buffet says he reads 8 hours a day.

"But he's rich, he has time to read" No, he is rich because he made time to do what counts - like investing in himself

The absolute cheapest/biggest ROI investment you can make in yourself is books.

Seriously, the reader puts the least amount of effort into a book, and gains the most value. If it is too much for you to read it, go get an audible membership and you can have somebody read it to you. I recommend both.

Sorry for the rant, but I have no patience for this anymore - its not just you

To add to your point. Reading a book cover to cover will reveal lots of subtle nuances and could spark other ideas within you that a brief summary will not.

A summary should be used as a companion as opposed to a replacement.


The Buffett Formula — How To Get Smarter
May 15, 2013 by Shane Parrish @farnamstreet

Warren-Buffett.jpeg

“The best thing a human being can do is to help another human being know more.”
— Charlie Munger

“Go to bed smarter than when you woke up.”
— Charlie Munger

Most people go though life not really getting any smarter. Why? They simply won’t do the work required.

It’s easy to come home, sit on the couch, watch TV and zone out until bed time rolls around. But that’s not really going to help you get smarter.

Sure you can go into the office the next day and discuss the details of last night’s episode of Mad Men or Game of Thrones. And, yes, you know what happened on Survivor. But that’s not knowledge accumulation, it’s a mind-numbing sedative.

But you can acquire knowledge if you want it.

In fact there is a simple formula, which if followed is almost certain to make you smarter over time.
Simple but not easy.

It involves a lot of hard work.

We’ll call it the
Buffett formula, named after Warren Buffett and his longtime business partner at Berkshire Hathaway, Charlie Munger. These two are an extraordinary combination of minds. They are also learning machines.

“I can see, he can hear. We make a great combination.” —
Warren Buffett, speaking of his partner and friend, Charlie Munger.

We can learn a lot from them. They didn’t get smart because they are both billionaires. No, in fact they became billionaires, in part, because they are smart. More importantly, they keep getting smarter. And it turns out that they have a lot to say on the subject.

How to get smarter

Read. A lot.

Warren Buffett says, “I just sit in my office and read all day.”

What does that mean? He estimates that he spends 80% of his working day reading and thinking.

“You could hardly find a partnership in which two people settle on reading more hours of the day than in ours,” Charlie Munger commented.

When asked how to get smarter, Buffett once held up stacks of paper and said “read 500 pages like this every day. That’s how knowledge builds up, like compound interest.”

All of us can build our knowledge but most of us won’t put in the effort.

One person who took Buffett’s advice, Todd Combs, now works for the legendary investor. After hearing Buffett talk he started keeping track of what he read and how many pages he was reading.

The Omaha World-Herald writes:

"Eventually finding and reading productive material became second nature, a habit. As he began his investing career, he would read even more, hitting 600, 750, even 1,000 pages a day.

Combs discovered that Buffett’s formula worked, giving him more knowledge that helped him with what became his primary job — seeking the truth about potential investments."

But how you read matters too.

You need to be critical and always thinking. You need to do the mental work required to hold an opinion.

In Working tougher: Why Great Partnerships Succeed Buffett comments to author Michael Eisner:

"Look, my job is essentially just corralling more and more and more facts and information, and occasionally seeing whether that leads to some action. And Charlie—his children call him a book with legs."

Continuous learning

Eisner continues:

"Maybe that’s why both men agree it’s better that they never lived in the same city, or worked in the same office. They would have wanted to talk all the time, leaving no time for the reading, which Munger describes as part of an essential continuing education program for the men who run one of the largest conglomerates in the world."

“I don’t think any other twosome in business was better at continuous learning than we were,” he says, talking in the past tense but not really meaning it. “And if we hadn’t been continuous learners, the record wouldn’t have been as good. And we were so extreme about it that we both spent the better part of our days reading, so we could learn more, which is not a common pattern in business.”

It doesn’t work how you think it works.

If you’re thinking they sit in front of a computer all day obsessing over numbers and figures? You’d be dead wrong.

““No,” says Warren. “We don’t read other people’s opinions. We want to get the facts, and then think.” And when it gets to the thinking part, for Buffett and Munger, there’s no one better to think with than their partners. “Charlie can’t encounter a problem without thinking of an answer,” posits Warren. “He has the best thirty-second mind I’ve ever seen. I’ll call him up, and within thirty seconds, he’ll grasp it. He just sees things immediately.”

Munger sees his knowledge accumulation as an acquired, rather than natural, genius. And he’d give all the credit to the studying he does.

“Neither Warren nor I is smart enough to make the decisions with no time to think,” Munger once told a reporter. “We make actual decisions very rapidly, but that’s because we’ve spent so much time preparing ourselves by quietly sitting and reading and thinking.”


How can you find time to read?

Finding the time to read is easier than you think. One way to help make that happen is to carve an hour out of your day just for yourself.

In an interview he gave for his authorized biography The Snowball, Buffett told the story:

"Charlie, as a very young lawyer, was probably getting $20 an hour. He thought to himself, ‘Who’s my most valuable client?’ And he decided it was himself. So he decided to sell himself an hour each day. He did it early in the morning, working on these construction projects and real estate deals. Everybody should do this, be the client, and then work for other people, too, and sell yourself an hour a day."

It’s important to think about the opportunity cost of this hour. On one hand you can check twitter, read some online news, and reply to a few emails while pretending to finish the memo that is supposed to be the focus of your attention. On the other hand, you can dedicate the time to improving yourself. In the short term, you’re better off with the dopamine laced rush of email and twitter while multitasking. In the long term, the investment in learning something new and improving yourself goes further.

“I have always wanted to improve what I do,“ Munger comments “even if it reduces my income in any given year. And I always set aside time so I can play my own self-amusement and improvement game.”

Reading is only part of the equation.

But reading isn’t enough. Charlie Munger offers:

"We read a lot. I don’t know anyone who’s wise who doesn’t read a lot. But that’s not enough: You have to have a temperament to grab ideas and do sensible things. Most people don’t grab the right ideas or don’t know what to do with them"

Commenting on what it means to have knowledge, in How To Read A Book, Mortimer Adler writes: “The person who says he knows what he thinks but cannot express it usually does not know what he thinks.”

Can you explain what you know to someone else? Try it. Pick an idea you think you have a grasp of and write it out on a sheet of paper as if you were explaining it to someone else. (see The Feynman Technique and here, if you want to improve retention.)

Nature or Nurture?

Another way to get smarter, outside of reading, is to surround yourself with people who are not afraid to challenge your ideas.

“Develop into a lifelong self-learner through voracious reading; cultivate curiosity and strive to become a little wiser every day.” — Charlie Munger

Source: https://www.farnamstreetblog.com/2013/05/the-buffett-formula-how-to-get-smarter/

 

theag

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Thank you for writing this up, I don't like spending time to read a 300 page book, when that knowledge could have been put in 30 pages, any way I don't mind reading more, if there is more you can think about, what this book teaches you, please share.
What's with every one talking about this book on the forum, is it really that good, will I learn a lot from it, I have already read so much, Iworkup if you would like to do a detailed summary of the book, I would love to read that summary, feel free to be as detailed as you like. If not that's totally cool as well.
Good attitude. You will make it far thinking like that.
 
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GreatestManEver

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I normally would just ignore negative posts, there’s no value in getting reactionary, specially on the internet, but I been learning from a lot of you over the past few years, might even need advice from some of you one day, so let me clarify. I also got to be careful of what I say on this forum, things can get taken out of context, since all you know of me is based on my few messages.

I have 13 books on my to read list, I’m thinking of adding #14 and #15, which would be “ready fire aim” and "Super Intelligence", these are the books that I actually want to read whole, I normally separate my reading to 2 things, books that I will read whole, and books that I will get summaries on. The books that are 80% fluff are the books I get summaries on, books that are like TMF are books that I read whole. I devote time every day to reading new books, I have a lot of other things I need to get done, and I have a deep dislike for anything that wastes my time. I’m very careful of where I spend my time, time is life and things that take my time take a piece of my life.

I love to read, but only things that are worth reading, only real difference between modern man and a cave man is knowledge. Knowledge makes the difference between living in a cave and living in a sky scraper.

To play devil's advocate, it sounds like he does a lot of reading and is trying to figure out the best way to find balance in reading too much and working...
Some one get’s it, thank you.

Are you kidding me?
Look mate, I'm pretty busy too. Just finishing night shift (7p-7a) ten of ten.
That means 120 hours of balls to the wall patient care in 240 total hours. I'm exhausted when I get home.
.
.
.
.
I'm making time to read the damned book.
Just think of the excitement you'll feel when the book arrives in your mailbox! You'll get your drink, sit down, open the cover, and then you'll begin to see for yourself what everyone is talking about.
Good luck!

Hey Doc I been following your posts for a while, I learned a lot from them, thank you. If you notice in my language I say things like “if you would like” “If not that's totally cool as well”, I wasn’t asking you to write one, I was simply trying to say if you wrote one, I would love to read it. I always find what you post of value, my apologies if it came out the wrong way.
 

Mattie

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GuestUser113

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Are you kidding me?

Look mate, I'm pretty busy too. Just finishing night shift (7p-7a) ten of ten.

That means 120 hours of balls to the wall patient care in 240 total hours. I'm exhausted when I get home.
.
.
.
.
I'm making time to read the damned book.

Just think of the excitement you'll feel when the book arrives in your mailbox! You'll get your drink, sit down, open the cover, and then you'll begin to see for yourself what everyone is talking about.

Good luck!


45WW0wy.gif
 

csalvato

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Are you kidding me?

Look mate, I'm pretty busy too. Just finishing night shift (7p-7a) ten of ten.

That means 120 hours of balls to the wall patient care in 240 total hours. I'm exhausted when I get home.
.
.
.
.
I'm making time to read the damned book.

Just think of the excitement you'll feel when the book arrives in your mailbox! You'll get your drink, sit down, open the cover, and then you'll begin to see for yourself what everyone is talking about.

Good luck!
To play devil's advocate, it sounds like he does a lot of reading and is trying to figure out the best way to find balance in reading too much and working...
 
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Veloce Grey

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What's with every one talking about this book on the forum, is it really that good, will I learn a lot from it, I have already read so much, Iworkup if you would like to do a detailed summary of the book, I would love to read that summary, feel free to be as detailed as you like. If not that's totally cool as well.
On the off chance that Mr Wokeup is busy and doesn't want to spend his time writing book summaries on request, you could always explore one of the many sites that provide such a service rather cheaply.

Or simply use a search and I'm sure you can get the gist of it fairly quickly.

Failing either of those options you could consider buying it if so many people recommend it.

If you aren't going to take the action to find the info yourself, what chance of you taking any action off whatever happens to be inside anyway?
 

jesseissorude

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Mineralogic

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I would read a summary of a book by a novice, like Four Hour Workweek or Blink.

I always make sure to read the full version of books by and about billionaires, like Zero to One or the autobiography of Benjamin Franklin.

I want to think like the big boys. So I read the full version and try and get in their head.

I am a slow reader and Zero to One only took me two days of light reading and was worth EVERY FREAKING MINUTE.

Did Thiel mention the part where aligning with elite such as Bilderberg's really opened up his success and continued success?
 

Iwokeup

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I get it. But sometimes you just have to dive into the mind of the author. Like... The summary version of TMF isn't close to the experience of reading it through. This is one of those books. Not too much fluff if you're starting out like I am.
 

Iwokeup

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Thanks for the summary. A lot of what he says is also emphasized in "Ready. Fire. Aim" by Masterson too.
 

GreatestManEver

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On the off chance that Mr Wokeup is busy and doesn't want to spend his time writing book summaries on request, you could always explore one of the many sites that provide such a service rather cheaply.

Or simply use a search and I'm sure you can get the gist of it fairly quickly.

Failing either of those options you could consider buying it if so many people recommend it.

If you aren't going to take the action to find the info yourself, what chance of you taking any action off whatever happens to be inside anyway?

I know there are services that sell summaries, I use them all the time, I recently wrote a post about how people should use these summary services a few days ago.

When some one from this forum, and some one that read TMF , writes a summaries I tend to pay more attention to it, I read a lot of his posts, so I know I can put more weight in what he says, then some guy in the slow lane writing summaries, won't be the same.

I take action, but thank you for your words, If I though some one wasn't taking action, I would probably say the same to them.

My time is the most important thing I have, I'm very careful on what I spend it on.
 

theag

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Hey Doc I been following your posts for a while, I learned a lot from them, thank you. If you notice in my language I say things like “if you would like” “If not that's totally cool as well”, I wasn’t asking you to write one, I was simply trying to say if you wrote one, I would love to read it. I always find what you post of value, my apologies if it came out the wrong way.
No worries. Sorry if I blew up at you.

As far as the book being worth your time to fully read: YES

Lots of books recommended around here are good motivational books but low yield on actionable info. "Ready. Fire. Aim" is filled with lots of actionable information, especially at the budding entrepreneur stage that I'm at. YMMV.
 

GreatestManEver

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Sorry for the rant, but I have no patience for this anymore - its not just you

lol I already read this book many months ago, this is an old post, the book was great, I recommend (ready fire aim) to any one interested in Business, its also a great book to read after reading TMFL, they both complement each other nicely.
 

hellolin

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Just finished this book, what a great read.
I felt like this book was in some way similar to MJ's book, in that they both tells the general public a lot great secrets about business and life that we simply were too blind to see or don't know.
Some of the most valid points are:
  • Business are in business to become monopolies, they are not there for the competition. In this case, if I were to encourage producer activities in a certain economy, the best thing I can do is to promise them the possibility of becoming a monopoly, the theory of competition only works for consumers, not so much for the producers. Like MJ, Peter also said in his book that the best way to grow your business to try to dominate a small market first, then grow bigger, don't start big.
  • To become an innovative person, your must have a period of personal and professional growth that's not like the others, being normal is a huge kill for going from 0 to 1, unfortunately, what our schools and society doing nowadays is pretty much encourage everyone to be normal, thus, going from 0 to 1 has pretty much stopped in all fields except IT.
  • And lastly, the 80/20 rule. It is funny that we humans in any given society are always promoting equality, while the truth wouldn't be further off: in any given society under any given rule, inequality are the dominating factor. This is actually the least shocking to me since I have already had my 80/20 rule in life: 80% of people that I meet during my lifetime are either average or below that, and only 20% of the people I meet are worthwhile. This is also true about trying in life: in life, only 20% of your chance to turn out to net any kind of positive return for you, 80% of them are going to fail. So essentially, how to treat failure become our greatest question in life.
 
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Andy Black

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Just finished it yesterday. A very easy read and well worth it.
 

BlakeIC

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Dude just read the books

These people pour years of knowledge and experience into a book over countless hours, and you can't be bothered with committing less than 10 hours to read it?

Sorry, but it always kills me when people complain about reading. I come from a complete vacuum in terms of success, and books have been my number one tool for pulling myself out of it. I bet you the majority of people out there are maybe 3-5 decent books away from being able to pursue every goal you can imagine. Tell them this and they say, "I just don't have time to read...."

Bullshit

I can 100% GUARANTEE you that you share the exact same number of hours in a day as guys like Bill Gates and Warren Buffet - who, by the way, credit much of their success to reading voraciously. Warren Buffet says he reads 8 hours a day.

"But he's rich, he has time to read" No, he is rich because he made time to do what counts - like investing in himself

The absolute cheapest/biggest ROI investment you can make in yourself is books.

Seriously, the reader puts the least amount of effort into a book, and gains the most value. If it is too much for you to read it, go get an audible membership and you can have somebody read it to you. I recommend both.

Sorry for the rant, but I have no patience for this anymore - its not just you
These people pour years of knowledge and experience into a book over countless hours

Ever since i read that line I have not been able to stop reading books (non fiction books to be learned from, of course.)

You definitely made an impact on my life with that line
 
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Pachem

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To add to your point. Reading a book cover to cover will reveal lots of subtle nuances and could spark other ideas within you that a brief summary will not.

A summary should be used as a companion as opposed to a replacement.


The Buffett Formula — How To Get Smarter
May 15, 2013 by Shane Parrish @farnamstreet

Warren-Buffett.jpeg

“The best thing a human being can do is to help another human being know more.”
— Charlie Munger

“Go to bed smarter than when you woke up.”
— Charlie Munger

Most people go though life not really getting any smarter. Why? They simply won’t do the work required.

It’s easy to come home, sit on the couch, watch TV and zone out until bed time rolls around. But that’s not really going to help you get smarter.

Sure you can go into the office the next day and discuss the details of last night’s episode of Mad Men or Game of Thrones. And, yes, you know what happened on Survivor. But that’s not knowledge accumulation, it’s a mind-numbing sedative.

But you can acquire knowledge if you want it.

In fact there is a simple formula, which if followed is almost certain to make you smarter over time.
Simple but not easy.

It involves a lot of hard work.

We’ll call it the
Buffett formula, named after Warren Buffett and his longtime business partner at Berkshire Hathaway, Charlie Munger. These two are an extraordinary combination of minds. They are also learning machines.

“I can see, he can hear. We make a great combination.” —
Warren Buffett, speaking of his partner and friend, Charlie Munger.

We can learn a lot from them. They didn’t get smart because they are both billionaires. No, in fact they became billionaires, in part, because they are smart. More importantly, they keep getting smarter. And it turns out that they have a lot to say on the subject.

How to get smarter

Read. A lot.

Warren Buffett says, “I just sit in my office and read all day.”

What does that mean? He estimates that he spends 80% of his working day reading and thinking.

“You could hardly find a partnership in which two people settle on reading more hours of the day than in ours,” Charlie Munger commented.

When asked how to get smarter, Buffett once held up stacks of paper and said “read 500 pages like this every day. That’s how knowledge builds up, like compound interest.”

All of us can build our knowledge but most of us won’t put in the effort.

One person who took Buffett’s advice, Todd Combs, now works for the legendary investor. After hearing Buffett talk he started keeping track of what he read and how many pages he was reading.

The Omaha World-Herald writes:

"Eventually finding and reading productive material became second nature, a habit. As he began his investing career, he would read even more, hitting 600, 750, even 1,000 pages a day.

Combs discovered that Buffett’s formula worked, giving him more knowledge that helped him with what became his primary job — seeking the truth about potential investments."

But how you read matters too.

You need to be critical and always thinking. You need to do the mental work required to hold an opinion.

In Working tougher: Why Great Partnerships Succeed Buffett comments to author Michael Eisner:

"Look, my job is essentially just corralling more and more and more facts and information, and occasionally seeing whether that leads to some action. And Charlie—his children call him a book with legs."

Continuous learning

Eisner continues:

"Maybe that’s why both men agree it’s better that they never lived in the same city, or worked in the same office. They would have wanted to talk all the time, leaving no time for the reading, which Munger describes as part of an essential continuing education program for the men who run one of the largest conglomerates in the world."

“I don’t think any other twosome in business was better at continuous learning than we were,” he says, talking in the past tense but not really meaning it. “And if we hadn’t been continuous learners, the record wouldn’t have been as good. And we were so extreme about it that we both spent the better part of our days reading, so we could learn more, which is not a common pattern in business.”

It doesn’t work how you think it works.

If you’re thinking they sit in front of a computer all day obsessing over numbers and figures? You’d be dead wrong.

““No,” says Warren. “We don’t read other people’s opinions. We want to get the facts, and then think.” And when it gets to the thinking part, for Buffett and Munger, there’s no one better to think with than their partners. “Charlie can’t encounter a problem without thinking of an answer,” posits Warren. “He has the best thirty-second mind I’ve ever seen. I’ll call him up, and within thirty seconds, he’ll grasp it. He just sees things immediately.”

Munger sees his knowledge accumulation as an acquired, rather than natural, genius. And he’d give all the credit to the studying he does.

“Neither Warren nor I is smart enough to make the decisions with no time to think,” Munger once told a reporter. “We make actual decisions very rapidly, but that’s because we’ve spent so much time preparing ourselves by quietly sitting and reading and thinking.”


How can you find time to read?

Finding the time to read is easier than you think. One way to help make that happen is to carve an hour out of your day just for yourself.

In an interview he gave for his authorized biography The Snowball, Buffett told the story:

"Charlie, as a very young lawyer, was probably getting $20 an hour. He thought to himself, ‘Who’s my most valuable client?’ And he decided it was himself. So he decided to sell himself an hour each day. He did it early in the morning, working on these construction projects and real estate deals. Everybody should do this, be the client, and then work for other people, too, and sell yourself an hour a day."

It’s important to think about the opportunity cost of this hour. On one hand you can check twitter, read some online news, and reply to a few emails while pretending to finish the memo that is supposed to be the focus of your attention. On the other hand, you can dedicate the time to improving yourself. In the short term, you’re better off with the dopamine laced rush of email and twitter while multitasking. In the long term, the investment in learning something new and improving yourself goes further.

“I have always wanted to improve what I do,“ Munger comments “even if it reduces my income in any given year. And I always set aside time so I can play my own self-amusement and improvement game.”

Reading is only part of the equation.

But reading isn’t enough. Charlie Munger offers:

"We read a lot. I don’t know anyone who’s wise who doesn’t read a lot. But that’s not enough: You have to have a temperament to grab ideas and do sensible things. Most people don’t grab the right ideas or don’t know what to do with them"

Commenting on what it means to have knowledge, in How To Read A Book, Mortimer Adler writes: “The person who says he knows what he thinks but cannot express it usually does not know what he thinks.”

Can you explain what you know to someone else? Try it. Pick an idea you think you have a grasp of and write it out on a sheet of paper as if you were explaining it to someone else. (see The Feynman Technique and here, if you want to improve retention.)

Nature or Nurture?

Another way to get smarter, outside of reading, is to surround yourself with people who are not afraid to challenge your ideas.

“Develop into a lifelong self-learner through voracious reading; cultivate curiosity and strive to become a little wiser every day.” — Charlie Munger

Source: https://www.farnamstreetblog.com/2013/05/the-buffett-formula-how-to-get-smarter/


Great comment and thanks for the note books of "Zero to One".

I finished the book last week and I think is a good reading too.
 

GreatestManEver

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Thank you for writing this up, I don't like spending time to read a 300 page book, when that knowledge could have been put in 30 pages, any way I don't mind reading more, if there is more you can think about, what this book teaches you, please share.
 
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GreatestManEver

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Thanks for the summary. A lot of what he says is also emphasized in "Ready. Fire. Aim" by Masterson too.
What's with every one talking about this book on the forum, is it really that good, will I learn a lot from it, I have already read so much, Iworkup if you would like to do a detailed summary of the book, I would love to read that summary, feel free to be as detailed as you like. If not that's totally cool as well.
 
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Ninjakid

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Seems like a good read. I'm tempted to read the whole thing now, but I just barely have a life outside of work right now =/
 

GreatestManEver

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Good attitude. You will make it far thinking like that.

Thank you, my time is the most important thing I have, and I have read too many 300 page book, where the guy takes 20 hours to teach me one thing or one idea, that I could have learned reading 20 pages, its like the first 1 year of college, where they make you learn all the stuff you already know.
 

GreatestManEver

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I would read a summary of a book by a novice, like Four Hour Workweek or Blink.

I always make sure to ead the full version of books by and about billionaires, like Zero to One or the autobiography of Benjamin Franklin.

I want to think like the big boys. So I read the full version and try and get in their head.

I am a slow reader and Zero to One only took me two days of light reading and was worth EVERY FREAKING MINUTE.
Thanks good advice.
 

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