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How great leaders inspire action

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    How do you explain when
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    things don't go as we assume?
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    Or better, how do you explain
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    when others are able to achieve things
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    that seem to defy all of the assumptions?
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    For example:
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    Why is Apple so innovative?
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    Year after year, after year, after year,
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    they're more innovative than all their competition.
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    And yet, they're just a computer company.
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    They're just like everyone else.
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    They have the same access to the same talent,
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    the same agencies, the same consultants, the same media.
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    Then why is it that they
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    seem to have something different?
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    Why is it that Martin Luther King
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    led the Civil Rights Movement?
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    He wasn't the only man
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    who suffered in a pre-civil rights America,
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    and he certainly wasn't the only great orator of the day.
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    Why him?
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    And why is it that the Wright brothers
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    were able to figure out controlled, powered man flight
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    when there were certainly other teams who were
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    better qualified, better funded ...
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    and they didn't achieve powered man flight,
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    and the Wright brothers beat them to it.
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    There's something else at play here.
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    About three and a half years ago
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    I made a discovery.
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    And this discovery profoundly changed
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    my view on how I thought the world worked,
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    and it even profoundly changed the way in which
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    I operate in it.
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    As it turns out, there's a pattern.
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    As it turns out, all the great and inspiring leaders
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    and organizations in the world --
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    whether it's Apple or Martin Luther King or the Wright brothers --
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    they all think, act and communicate
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    the exact same way.
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    And it's the complete opposite
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    to everyone else.
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    All I did was codify it,
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    and it's probably the world's
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    simplest idea.
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    I call it the golden circle.
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    Why? How? What?
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    This little idea explains
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    why some organizations and some leaders
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    are able to inspire where others aren't.
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    Let me define the terms really quickly.
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    Every single person, every single organization on the planet
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    knows what they do,
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    100 percent.
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    Some know how they do it,
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    whether you call it your differentiated value proposition
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    or your proprietary process or your USP.
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    But very, very few people or organizations
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    know why they do what they do.
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    And by "why" I don't mean "to make a profit."
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    That's a result. It's always a result.
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    By "why," I mean: What's your purpose?
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    What's your cause? What's your belief?
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    Why does your organization exist?
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    Why do you get out of bed in the morning?
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    And why should anyone care?
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    Well, as a result, the way we think, the way we act,
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    the way we communicate is from the outside in.
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    It's obvious. We go from the clearest thing to the fuzziest thing.
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    But the inspired leaders
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    and the inspired organizations --
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    regardless of their size, regardless of their industry --
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    all think, act and communicate
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    from the inside out.
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    Let me give you an example.
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    I use Apple because they're easy to understand and everybody gets it.
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    If Apple were like everyone else,
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    a marketing message from them might sound like this:
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    "We make great computers.
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    They're beautifully designed, simple to use
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    and user friendly.
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    Want to buy one?" "Meh."
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    And that's how most of us communicate.
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    That's how most marketing is done, that's how most sales is done
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    and that's how most of us communicate interpersonally.
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    We say what we do, we say how we're different or how we're better
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    and we expect some sort of a behavior,
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    a purchase, a vote, something like that.
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    Here's our new law firm:
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    We have the best lawyers with the biggest clients,
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    we always perform for our clients who do business with us.
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    Here's our new car:
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    It gets great gas mileage, it has leather seats, buy our car.
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    But it's uninspiring.
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    Here's how Apple actually communicates.
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    "Everything we do,
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    we believe in challenging the status quo.
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    We believe in thinking differently.
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    The way we challenge the status quo
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    is by making our products beautifully designed,
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    simple to use and user friendly.
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    We just happen to make great computers.
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    Want to buy one?"
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    Totally different right? You're ready to buy a computer from me.
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    All I did was reverse the order of the information.
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    What it proves to us is that people don't buy what you do;
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    people buy why you do it.
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    People don't buy what you do; they buy why you do it.
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    This explains why
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    every single person in this room
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    is perfectly comfortable buying a computer from Apple.
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    But we're also perfectly comfortable
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    buying an MP3 player from Apple, or a phone from Apple,
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    or a DVR from Apple.
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    But, as I said before, Apple's just a computer company.
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    There's nothing that distinguishes them
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    structurally from any of their competitors.
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    Their competitors are all equally qualified to make all of these products.
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    In fact, they tried.
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    A few years ago, Gateway came out with flat screen TVs.
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    They're eminently qualified to make flat screen TVs.
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    They've been making flat screen monitors for years.
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    Nobody bought one.
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    Dell came out with MP3 players and PDAs,
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    and they make great quality products,
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    and they can make perfectly well-designed products --
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    and nobody bought one.
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    In fact, talking about it now, we can't even imagine
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    buying an MP3 player from Dell.
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    Why would you buy an MP3 player from a computer company?
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    But we do it every day.
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    People don't buy what you do; they buy why you do it.
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    The goal is not to do business
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    with everybody who needs what you have.
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    The goal is to do business with people
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    who believe what you believe.
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    Here's the best part:
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    None of what I'm telling you is my opinion.
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    It's all grounded in the tenets of biology.
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    Not psychology, biology.
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    If you look at a cross-section of the human brain, looking from the top down,
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    what you see is the human brain is actually broken
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    into three major components
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    that correlate perfectly with the golden circle.
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    Our newest brain, our Homo sapien brain,
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    our neocortex,
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    corresponds with the "what" level.
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    The neocortex is responsible for all of our
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    rational and analytical thought
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    and language.
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    The middle two sections make up our limbic brains,
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    and our limbic brains are responsible for all of our feelings,
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    like trust and loyalty.
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    It's also responsible for all human behavior,
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    all decision-making,
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    and it has no capacity for language.
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    In other words, when we communicate from the outside in,
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    yes, people can understand vast amounts of complicated information
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    like features and benefits and facts and figures.
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    It just doesn't drive behavior.
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    When we can communicate from the inside out,
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    we're talking directly to the part of the brain
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    that controls behavior,
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    and then we allow people to rationalize it
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    with the tangible things we say and do.
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    This is where gut decisions come from.
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    You know, sometimes you can give somebody
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    all the facts and figures,
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    and they say, "I know what all the facts and details say,
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    but it just doesn't feel right."
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    Why would we use that verb, it doesn't "feel" right?
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    Because the part of the brain that controls decision-making
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    doesn't control language.
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    And the best we can muster up is, "I don't know. It just doesn't feel right."
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    Or sometimes you say you're leading with your heart,
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    or you're leading with your soul.
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    Well, I hate to break it to you, those aren't other body parts
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    controlling your behavior.
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    It's all happening here in your limbic brain,
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    the part of the brain that controls decision-making and not language.
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    But if you don't know why you do what you do,
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    and people respond to why you do what you do,
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    then how will you ever get people
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    to vote for you, or buy something from you,
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    or, more importantly, be loyal
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    and want to be a part of what it is that you do.
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    Again, the goal is not just to sell to people who need what you have;
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    the goal is to sell to people who believe what you believe.
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    The goal is not just to hire people
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    who need a job;
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    it's to hire people who believe what you believe.
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    I always say that, you know,
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    if you hire people just because they can do a job, they'll work for your money,
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    but if you hire people who believe what you believe,
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    they'll work for you with blood and sweat and tears.
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    And nowhere else is there a better example of this
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    than with the Wright brothers.
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    Most people don't know about Samuel Pierpont Langley.
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    And back in the early 20th century,
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    the pursuit of powered man flight was like the dot com of the day.
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    Everybody was trying it.
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    And Samuel Pierpont Langley had, what we assume,
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    to be the recipe for success.
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    I mean, even now, you ask people,
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    "Why did your product or why did your company fail?"
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    and people always give you the same permutation
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    of the same three things:
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    under-capitalized, the wrong people, bad market conditions.
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    It's always the same three things, so let's explore that.
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    Samuel Pierpont Langley
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    was given 50,000 dollars by the War Department
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    to figure out this flying machine.
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    Money was no problem.
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    He held a seat at Harvard
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    and worked at the Smithsonian and was extremely well-connected;
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    he knew all the big minds of the day.
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    He hired the best minds
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    money could find
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    and the market conditions were fantastic.
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    The New York Times followed him around everywhere,
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    and everyone was rooting for Langley.
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    Then how come we've never heard of Samuel Pierpont Langley?
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    A few hundred miles away in Dayton Ohio,
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    Orville and Wilbur Wright,
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    they had none of what we consider
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    to be the recipe for success.
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    They had no money;
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    they paid for their dream with the proceeds from their bicycle shop;
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    not a single person on the Wright brothers' team
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    had a college education,
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    not even Orville or Wilbur;
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    and The New York Times followed them around nowhere.
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    The difference was,
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    Orville and Wilbur were driven by a cause,
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    by a purpose, by a belief.
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    They believed that if they
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    could figure out this flying machine,
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    it'll change the course of the world.
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    Samuel Pierpont Langley was different.
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    He wanted to be rich, and he wanted to be famous.
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    He was in pursuit of the result.
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    He was in pursuit of the riches.
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    And lo and behold, look what happened.
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    The people who believed in the Wright brothers' dream
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    worked with them with blood and sweat and tears.
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    The others just worked for the paycheck.
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    And they tell stories of how every time the Wright brothers went out,
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    they would have to take five sets of parts,
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    because that's how many times they would crash
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    before they came in for supper.
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    And, eventually, on December 17th, 1903,
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    the Wright brothers took flight,
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    and no one was there to even experience it.
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    We found out about it a few days later.
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    And further proof that Langley
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    was motivated by the wrong thing:
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    The day the Wright brothers took flight, he quit.
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    He could have said,
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    "That's an amazing discovery, guys,
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    and I will improve upon your technology," but he didn't.
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    He wasn't first, he didn't get rich,
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    he didn't get famous so he quit.
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    People don't buy what you do; they buy why you do it.
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    And if you talk about what you believe,
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    you will attract those who believe what you believe.
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    But why is it important to attract those who believe what you believe?
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    Something called the law of diffusion of innovation,
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    and if you don't know the law, you definitely know the terminology.
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    The first two and a half percent of our population
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    are our innovators.
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    The next 13 and a half percent of our population
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    are our early adopters.
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    The next 34 percent are your early majority,
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    your late majority and your laggards.
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    The only reason these people buy touch tone phones
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    is because you can't buy rotary phones anymore.
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    (Laughter)
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    We all sit at various places at various times on this scale,
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    but what the law of diffusion of innovation tells us
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    is that if you want mass-market success
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    or mass-market acceptance of an idea,
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    you cannot have it
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    until you achieve this tipping point
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    between 15 and 18 percent market penetration,
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    and then the system tips.
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    And I love asking businesses, "What's your conversion on new business?"
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    And they love to tell you, "Oh, it's about 10 percent," proudly.
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    Well, you can trip over 10 percent of the customers.
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    We all have about 10 percent who just "get it."
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    That's how we describe them, right?
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    That's like that gut feeling, "Oh, they just get it."
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    The problem is: How do you find the ones that get it
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    before you're doing business with them versus the ones who don't get it?
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    So it's this here, this little gap
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    that you have to close,
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    as Jeffrey Moore calls it, "Crossing the Chasm" --
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    because, you see, the early majority
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    will not try something
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    until someone else
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    has tried it first.
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    And these guys, the innovators and the early adopters,
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    they're comfortable making those gut decisions.
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    They're more comfortable making those intuitive decisions
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    that are driven by what they believe about the world
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    and not just what product is available.
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    These are the people who stood in line for six hours
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    to buy an iPhone when they first came out,
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    when you could have just walked into the store the next week
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    and bought one off the shelf.
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    These are the people who spent 40,000 dollars
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    on flat screen TVs when they first came out,
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    even though the technology was substandard.
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    And, by the way, they didn't do it
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    because the technology was so great;
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    they did it for themselves.
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    It's because they wanted to be first.
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    People don't buy what you do; they buy why you do it
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    and what you do simply
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    proves what you believe.
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    In fact, people will do the things
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    that prove what they believe.
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    The reason that person bought the iPhone
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    in the first six hours,
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    stood in line for six hours,
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    was because of what they believed about the world,
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    and how they wanted everybody to see them:
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    They were first.
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    People don't buy what you do; they buy why you do it.
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    So let me give you a famous example,
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    a famous failure and a famous success
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    of the law of diffusion of innovation.
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    First, the famous failure.
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    It's a commercial example.
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    As we said before, a second ago,
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    the recipe for success is money and the right people and the right market conditions,
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    right? You should have success then.
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    Look at TiVo.
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    From the time TiVo came out about eight or nine years ago
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    to this current day,
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    they are the single highest-quality product on the market,
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    hands down, there is no dispute.
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    They were extremely well-funded.
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    Market conditions were fantastic.
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    I mean, we use TiVo as verb.
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    I TiVo stuff on my piece of junk Time Warner DVR all the time.
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    But TiVo's a commercial failure.
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    They've never made money.
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    And when they went IPO,
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    their stock was at about 30 or 40 dollars
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    and then plummeted, and it's never traded above 10.
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    In fact, I don't think it's even traded above six,
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    except for a couple of little spikes.
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    Because you see, when TiVo launched their product
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    they told us all what they had.
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    They said, "We have a product that pauses live TV,
  • 14:20 - 14:23
    skips commercials, rewinds live TV
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    and memorizes your viewing habits
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    without you even asking."
  • 14:28 - 14:30
    And the cynical majority said,
  • 14:30 - 14:32
    "We don't believe you.
  • 14:32 - 14:34
    We don't need it. We don't like it.
  • 14:34 - 14:36
    You're scaring us."
  • 14:36 - 14:38
    What if they had said,
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    "If you're the kind of person
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    who likes to have total control
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    over every aspect of your life,
  • 14:46 - 14:49
    boy, do we have a product for you.
  • 14:49 - 14:51
    It pauses live TV, skips commercials,
  • 14:51 - 14:54
    memorizes your viewing habits, etc., etc."
  • 14:54 - 14:56
    People don't buy what you do; they buy why you do it,
  • 14:56 - 14:58
    and what you do simply serves as
  • 14:58 - 15:00
    the proof of what you believe.
  • 15:00 - 15:03
    Now let me give you a successful example
  • 15:03 - 15:06
    of the law of diffusion of innovation.
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    In the summer of 1963,
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    250,000 people showed up
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    on the mall in Washington
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    to hear Dr. King speak.
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    They sent out no invitations,
  • 15:19 - 15:22
    and there was no website to check the date.
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    How do you do that?
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    Well, Dr. King wasn't the only man in America
  • 15:26 - 15:28
    who was a great orator.
  • 15:28 - 15:30
    He wasn't the only man in America who suffered
  • 15:30 - 15:32
    in a pre-civil rights America.
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    In fact, some of his ideas were bad.
  • 15:35 - 15:37
    But he had a gift.
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    He didn't go around telling people what needed to change in America.
  • 15:40 - 15:42
    He went around and told people what he believed.
  • 15:42 - 15:44
    "I believe, I believe, I believe,"
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    he told people.
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    And people who believed what he believed
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    took his cause, and they made it their own,
  • 15:50 - 15:52
    and they told people.
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    And some of those people created structures
  • 15:54 - 15:56
    to get the word out to even more people.
  • 15:56 - 15:58
    And lo and behold,
  • 15:58 - 16:00
    250,000 people showed up
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    on the right day at the right time
  • 16:03 - 16:05
    to hear him speak.
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    How many of them showed up for him?
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    Zero.
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    They showed up for themselves.
  • 16:13 - 16:15
    It's what they believed about America
  • 16:15 - 16:18
    that got them to travel in a bus for eight hours
  • 16:18 - 16:21
    to stand in the sun in Washington in the middle of August.
  • 16:21 - 16:24
    It's what they believed, and it wasn't about black versus white:
  • 16:24 - 16:27
    25 percent of the audience was white.
  • 16:27 - 16:29
    Dr. King believed that
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    there are two types of laws in this world:
  • 16:31 - 16:33
    those that are made by a higher authority
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    and those that are made by man.
  • 16:35 - 16:38
    And not until all the laws that are made by man
  • 16:38 - 16:40
    are consistent with the laws that are made by the higher authority
  • 16:40 - 16:42
    will we live in a just world.
  • 16:42 - 16:44
    It just so happened that the Civil Rights Movement
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    was the perfect thing to help him
  • 16:47 - 16:49
    bring his cause to life.
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    We followed, not for him, but for ourselves.
  • 16:52 - 16:54
    And, by the way, he gave the "I have a dream" speech,
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    not the "I have a plan" speech.
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    (Laughter)
  • 17:00 - 17:03
    Listen to politicians now, with their comprehensive 12-point plans.
  • 17:03 - 17:05
    They're not inspiring anybody.
  • 17:05 - 17:08
    Because there are leaders and there are those who lead.
  • 17:08 - 17:10
    Leaders hold a position of power
  • 17:10 - 17:12
    or authority,
  • 17:12 - 17:15
    but those who lead inspire us.
  • 17:16 - 17:18
    Whether they're individuals or organizations,
  • 17:18 - 17:20
    we follow those who lead,
  • 17:20 - 17:22
    not because we have to,
  • 17:22 - 17:25
    but because we want to.
  • 17:25 - 17:28
    We follow those who lead, not for them,
  • 17:28 - 17:30
    but for ourselves.
  • 17:30 - 17:33
    And it's those who start with "why"
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    that have the ability
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    to inspire those around them
  • 17:37 - 17:40
    or find others who inspire them.
  • 17:40 - 17:42
    Thank you very much.
  • 17:42 - 17:44
    (Applause)
Title:
How great leaders inspire action
Speaker:
Simon Sinek
Description:

Simon Sinek has a simple but powerful model for inspirational leadership all starting with a golden circle and the question "Why?" His examples include Apple, Martin Luther King, and the Wright brothers -- and as a counterpoint Tivo, which (until a recent court victory that tripled its stock price) appeared to be struggling.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
17:44

English subtitles

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