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TED Talks - Most Popular - How great leaders inspire action

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Simon Sinek has a simple but powerful model for inspirational leadership -- starting with a golden circle and the question: "Why?" His examples include Apple, Martin Luther King Jr. and the Wright brothers ...

How
do
you
explain
when
things
don't
go
as
we
assume?
Or
better,
how
do
you
explain
when
others
are
able
to
achieve
things
that
seem
to
defy
all
of
the
assumptions?
For
example:
Why
is
Apple
so
innovative?
Year
after
year,
after
year,
they're
more
innovative
than
all
their
competition.
And
yet,
they're
just
a
computer
company.
They're
just
like
everyone
else.
They
have
the
same
access
to
the
same
talent,
the
same
agencies,
the
same
consultants,
the
same
media.
Then
why
is
it
that
they
seem
to
have
something
different?
Why
is
it
that
Martin
Luther
King
led
the
Civil
Rights
Movement?
He
wasn't
the
only
man
who
suffered
in
pre-civil
rights
America,
and
he
certainly
wasn't
the
only
great
orator
of
the
day.
Why
him?
And
why
is
it
that
the
Wright
brothers
were
able
to
figure
out
controlled,
powered
man
flight
when
there
were
certainly
other
teams
who
were
better
qualified,
better
funded
--
and
they
didn't
achieve
powered
man
flight,
and
the
Wright
brothers
beat
them
to
it.
There's
something
else
at
play
here.
About
three
and
a
half
years
ago,
I
made
a
discovery.
And
this
discovery
profoundly
changed
my
view
on
how
I
thought
the
world
worked,
and
it
even
profoundly
changed
the
way
in
which
I
operate
in
it.
As
it
turns
out,
there's
a
pattern.
As
it
turns
out,
all
the
great
inspiring
leaders
and
organizations
in
the
world,
whether
it's
Apple
or
Martin
Luther
King
or
the
Wright
brothers,
they
all
think,
act
and
communicate
the
exact
same
way.
And
it's
the
complete
opposite
to
everyone
else.
All
I
did
was
codify
it,
and
it's
probably
the
world's
simplest
idea.
I
call
it
the
golden
circle.
Why?
How?
What?
This
little
idea
explains
why
some
organizations
and
some
leaders
are
able
to
inspire
where
others
aren't.
Let
me
define
the
terms
really
quickly.
Every
single
person,
every
single
organization
on
the
planet
knows
what
they
do,
100
percent.
Some
know
how
they
do
it,
whether
you
call
it
your
differentiated
value
proposition
or
your
proprietary
process
or
your
USP.
But
very,
very
few
people
or
organizations
know
why
they
do
what
they
do.
And
by
"why"
I
don't
mean
"to
make
a
profit."
That's
a
result.
It's
always
a
result.
By
"why,"
I
mean:
What's
your
purpose?
What's
your
cause?
What's
your
belief?
Why
does
your
organization
exist?
Why
do
you
get
out
of
bed
in
the
morning?
And
why
should
anyone
care?
As
a
result,
the
way
we
think,
we
act,
the
way
we
communicate
is
from
the
outside
in,
it's
obvious.
We
go
from
the
clearest
thing
to
the
fuzziest
thing.
But
the
inspired
leaders
and
the
inspired
organizations
--
regardless
of
their
size,
regardless
of
their
industry
--
all
think,
act
and
communicate
from
the
inside
out.
Let
me
give
you
an
example.
I
use
Apple
because
they're
easy
to
understand
and
everybody
gets
it.
If
Apple
were
like
everyone
else,
a
marketing
message
from
them
might
sound
like
this:
"We
make
great
computers.
They're
beautifully
designed,
simple
to
use
and
user
friendly.
Want
to
buy
one?"
"Meh."
That's
how
most
of
us
communicate.
That's
how
most
marketing
and
sales
are
done,
that's
how
we
communicate
interpersonally.
We
say
what
we
do,
we
say
how
we're
different
or
better
and
we
expect
some
sort
of
a
behavior,
a
purchase,
a
vote,
something
like
that.
Here's
our
new
law
firm:
We
have
the
best
lawyers
with
the
biggest
clients,
we
always
perform
for
our
clients.
Here's
our
new
car:
It
gets
great
gas
mileage,
it
has
leather
seats.
Buy
our
car.
But
it's
uninspiring.
Here's
how
Apple
actually
communicates.
"Everything
we
do,
we
believe
in
challenging
the
status
quo.
We
believe
in
thinking
differently.
The
way
we
challenge
the
status
quo
is
by
making
our
products
beautifully
designed,
simple
to
use
and
user
friendly.
We
just
happen
to
make
great
computers.
Want
to
buy
one?"
Totally
different,
right?
You're
ready
to
buy
a
computer
from
me.
I
just
reversed
the
order
of
the
information.
What
it
proves
to
us
is
that
people
don't
buy
what
you
do;
people
buy
why
you
do
it.
This
explains
why
every
single
person
in
this
room
is
perfectly
comfortable
buying
a
computer
from
Apple.
But
we're
also
perfectly
comfortable
buying
an
MP3
player
from
Apple,
or
a
phone
from
Apple,
or
a
DVR
from
Apple.
As
I
said
before,
Apple's
just
a
computer
company.
Nothing
distinguishes
them
structurally
from
any
of
their
competitors.
Their
competitors
are
equally
qualified
to
make
all
of
these
products.
In
fact,
they
tried.
A
few
years
ago,
Gateway
came
out
with
flat-screen
TVs.
They're
eminently
qualified
to
make
flat-screen
TVs.
They've
been
making
flat-screen
monitors
for
years.
Nobody
bought
one.
Dell
came
out
with
MP3
players
and
PDAs,
and
they
make
great
quality
products,
and
they
can
make
perfectly
well-designed
products
--
and
nobody
bought
one.
In
fact,
talking
about
it
now,
we
can't
even
imagine
buying
an
MP3
player
from
Dell.
Why
would
you
buy
one
from
a
computer
company?
But
we
do
it
every
day.
People
don't
buy
what
you
do;
they
buy
why
you
do
it.
The
goal
is
not
to
do
business
with
everybody
who
needs
what
you
have.
The
goal
is
to
do
business
with
people
who
believe
what
you
believe.
Here's
the
best
part:
None
of
what
I'm
telling
you
is
my
opinion.
It's
all
grounded
in
the
tenets
of
biology.
Not
psychology,
biology.
If
you
look
at
a
cross-section
of
the
human
brain,
from
the
top
down,
the
human
brain
is
actually
broken
into
three
major
components
that
correlate
perfectly
with
the
golden
circle.
Our
newest
brain,
our
Homo
sapien
brain,
our
neocortex,
corresponds
with
the
"what"
level.
The
neocortex
is
responsible
for
all
of
our
rational
and
analytical
thought
and
language.
The
middle
two
sections
make
up
our
limbic
brains,
and
our
limbic
brains
are
responsible
for
all
of
our
feelings,
like
trust
and
loyalty.
It's
also
responsible
for
all
human
behavior,
all
decision-making,
and
it
has
no
capacity
for
language.
In
other
words,
when
we
communicate
from
the
outside
in,
yes,
people
can
understand
vast
amounts
of
complicated
information
like
features
and
benefits
and
facts
and
figures.
It
just
doesn't
drive
behavior.
When
we
can
communicate
from
the
inside
out,
we're
talking
directly
to
the
part
of
the
brain
that
controls
behavior,
and
then
we
allow
people
to
rationalize
it
with
the
tangible
things
we
say
and
do.
This
is
where
gut
decisions
come
from.
Sometimes
you
can
give
somebody
all
the
facts
and
figures,
and
they
say,
"I
know
what
all
the
facts
and
details
say,
but
it
just
doesn't
feel
right."
Why
would
we
use
that
verb,
it
doesn't
"feel"
right?
Because
the
part
of
the
brain
that
controls
decision-making
doesn't
control
language.
The
best
we
can
muster
up
is,
"I
don't
know.
It
just
doesn't
feel
right."
Or
sometimes
you
say
you're
leading
with
your
heart
or
soul.
I
hate
to
break
it
to
you,
those
aren't
other
body
parts
controlling
your
behavior.
It's
all
happening
here
in
your
limbic
brain,
the
part
of
the
brain
that
controls
decision-making
and
not
language.
But
if
you
don't
know
why
you
do
what
you
do,
and
people
respond
to
why
you
do
what
you
do,
then
how
will
you
ever
get
people
to
vote
for
you,
or
buy
something
from
you,
or,
more
importantly,
be
loyal
and
want
to
be
a
part
of
what
it
is
that
you
do.
The
goal
is
not
just
to
sell
to
people
who
need
what
you
have;
the
goal
is
to
sell
to
people
who
believe
what
you
believe.
The
goal
is
not
just
to
hire
people
who
need
a
job;
it's
to
hire
people
who
believe
what
you
believe.
I
always
say
that,
you
know,
if
you
hire
people
just
because
they
can
do
a
job,
they'll
work
for
your
money,
but
if
they
believe
what
you
believe,
they'll
work
for
you
with
blood
and
sweat
and
tears.
Nowhere
else
is
there
a
better
example
than
with
the
Wright
brothers.
Most
people
don't
know
about
Samuel
Pierpont
Langley.
And
back
in
the
early
20th
century,
the
pursuit
of
powered
man
flight
was
like
the
dot
com
of
the
day.
Everybody
was
trying
it.
And
Samuel
Pierpont
Langley
had,
what
we
assume,
to
be
the
recipe
for
success.
Even
now,
you
ask
people,
"Why
did
your
product
or
why
did
your
company
fail?"
and
people
always
give
you
the
same
permutation
of
the
same
three
things:
under-capitalized,
the
wrong
people,
bad
market
conditions.
It's
always
the
same
three
things,
so
let's
explore
that.
Samuel
Pierpont
Langley
was
given
50,000
dollars
by
the
War
Department
to
figure
out
this
flying
machine.
Money
was
no
problem.
He
held
a
seat
at
Harvard
and
worked
at
the
Smithsonian
and
was
extremely
well-connected;
he
knew
all
the
big
minds
of
the
day.
He
hired
the
best
minds
money
could
find
and
the
market
conditions
were
fantastic.
The
New
York
Times
followed
him
around
everywhere,
and
everyone
was
rooting
for
Langley.
Then
how
come
we've
never
heard
of
Samuel
Pierpont
Langley?
A
few
hundred
miles
away
in
Dayton,
Ohio,
Orville
and
Wilbur
Wright,
they
had
none
of
what
we
consider
to
be
the
recipe
for
success.
They
had
no
money;
they
paid
for
their
dream
with
the
proceeds
from
their
bicycle
shop.
Not
a
single
person
on
the
Wright
brothers'
team
had
a
college
education,
not
even
Orville
or
Wilbur.
And
The
New
York
Times
followed
them
around
nowhere.
The
difference
was,
Orville
and
Wilbur
were
driven
by
a
cause,
by
a
purpose,
by
a
belief.
They
believed
that
if
they
could
figure
out
this
flying
machine,
it'll
change
the
course
of
the
world.
Samuel
Pierpont
Langley
was
different.
He
wanted
to
be
rich,
and
he
wanted
to
be
famous.
He
was
in
pursuit
of
the
result.
He
was
in
pursuit
of
the
riches.
And
lo
and
behold,
look
what
happened.
The
people
who
believed
in
the
Wright
brothers'
dream
worked
with
them
with
blood
and
sweat
and
tears.
The
others
just
worked
for
the
paycheck.
They
tell
stories
of
how
every
time
the
Wright
brothers
went
out,
they
would
have
to
take
five
sets
of
parts,
because
that's
how
many
times
they
would
crash
before
supper.
And,
eventually,
on
December
17th,
1903,
the
Wright
brothers
took
flight,
and
no
one
was
there
to
even
experience
it.
We
found
out
about
it
a
few
days
later.
And
further
proof
that
Langley
was
motivated
by
the
wrong
thing:
the
day
the
Wright
brothers
took
flight,
he
quit.
He
could
have
said,
"That's
an
amazing
discovery,
guys,
and
I
will
improve
upon
your
technology,"
but
he
didn't.
He
wasn't
first,
he
didn't
get
rich,
he
didn't
get
famous,
so
he
quit.
People
don't
buy
what
you
do;
they
buy
why
you
do
it.
If
you
talk
about
what
you
believe,
you
will
attract
those
who
believe
what
you
believe.
But
why
is
it
important
to
attract
those
who
believe
what
you
believe?
Something
called
the
law
of
diffusion
of
innovation,
if
you
don't
know
the
law,
you
know
the
terminology.
The
first
2.5%
of
our
population
are
our
innovators.
The
next
13.5%
of
our
population
are
our
early
adopters.
The
next
34%
are
your
early
majority,
your
late
majority
and
your
laggards.
The
only
reason
these
people
buy
touch-tone
phones
is
because
you
can't
buy
rotary
phones
anymore.
(Laughter)
We
all
sit
at
various
places
at
various
times
on
this
scale,
but
what
the
law
of
diffusion
of
innovation
tells
us
is
that
if
you
want
mass-market
success
or
mass-market
acceptance
of
an
idea,
you
cannot
have
it
until
you
achieve
this
tipping
point
between
15
and
18
percent
market
penetration,
and
then
the
system
tips.
I
love
asking
businesses,
"What's
your
conversion
on
new
business?"
They
love
to
tell
you,
"It's
about
10
percent,"
proudly.
Well,
you
can
trip
over
10%
of
the
customers.
We
all
have
about
10%
who
just
"get
it."
That's
how
we
describe
them,
right?
That's
like
that
gut
feeling,
"Oh,
they
just
get
it."
The
problem
is:
How
do
you
find
the
ones
that
get
it
before
doing
business
versus
the
ones
who
don't
get
it?
So
it's
this
here,
this
little
gap
that
you
have
to
close,
as
Jeffrey
Moore
calls
it,
"Crossing
the
Chasm"
--
because,
you
see,
the
early
majority
will
not
try
something
until
someone
else
has
tried
it
first.
And
these
guys,
the
innovators
and
the
early
adopters,
they're
comfortable
making
those
gut
decisions.
They're
more
comfortable
making
those
intuitive
decisions
that
are
driven
by
what
they
believe
about
the
world
and
not
just
what
product
is
available.
These
are
the
people
who
stood
in
line
for
six
hours
to
buy
an
iPhone
when
they
first
came
out,
when
you
could
have
bought
one
off
the
shelf
the
next
week.
These
are
the
people
who
spent
40,000
dollars
on
flat-screen
TVs
when
they
first
came
out,
even
though
the
technology
was
substandard.
And,
by
the
way,
they
didn't
do
it
because
the
technology
was
so
great;
they
did
it
for
themselves.
It's
because
they
wanted
to
be
first.
People
don't
buy
what
you
do;
they
buy
why
you
do
it
and
what
you
do
simply
proves
what
you
believe.
In
fact,
people
will
do
the
things
that
prove
what
they
believe.
The
reason
that
person
bought
the
iPhone
in
the
first
six
hours,
stood
in
line
for
six
hours,
was
because
of
what
they
believed
about
the
world,
and
how
they
wanted
everybody
to
see
them:
they
were
first.
People
don't
buy
what
you
do;
they
buy
why
you
do
it.
So
let
me
give
you
a
famous
example,
a
famous
failure
and
a
famous
success
of
the
law
of
diffusion
of
innovation.
First,
the
famous
failure.
It's
a
commercial
example.
As
we
said
before,
the
recipe
for
success
is
money
and
the
right
people
and
the
right
market
conditions.
You
should
have
success
then.
Look
at
TiVo.
From
the
time
TiVo
came
out
about
eight
or
nine
years
ago
to
this
current
day,
they
are
the
single
highest-quality
product
on
the
market,
hands
down,
there
is
no
dispute.
They
were
extremely
well-funded.
Market
conditions
were
fantastic.
I
mean,
we
use
TiVo
as
verb.
I
TiVo
stuff
on
my
piece-of-junk
Time
Warner
DVR
all
the
time.
(Laughter)
But
TiVo's
a
commercial
failure.
They've
never
made
money.
And
when
they
went
IPO,
their
stock
was
at
about
30
or
40
dollars
and
then
plummeted,
and
it's
never
traded
above
10.
In
fact,
I
don't
think
it's
even
traded
above
six,
except
for
a
couple
of
little
spikes.
Because
you
see,
when
TiVo
launched
their
product,
they
told
us
all
what
they
had.
They
said,
"We
have
a
product
that
pauses
live
TV,
skips
commercials,
rewinds
live
TV
and
memorizes
your
viewing
habits
without
you
even
asking."
And
the
cynical
majority
said,
"We
don't
believe
you.
We
don't
need
it.
We
don't
like
it.
You're
scaring
us."
What
if
they
had
said,
"If
you're
the
kind
of
person
who
likes
to
have
total
control
over
every
aspect
of
your
life,
boy,
do
we
have
a
product
for
you.
It
pauses
live
TV,
skips
commercials,
memorizes
your
viewing
habits,
etc.,
etc."
People
don't
buy
what
you
do;
they
buy
why
you
do
it,
and
what
you
do
simply
serves
as
the
proof
of
what
you
believe.
Now
let
me
give
you
a
successful
example
of
the
law
of
diffusion
of
innovation.
In
the
summer
of
1963,
250,000
people
showed
up
on
the
mall
in
Washington
to
hear
Dr.
King
speak.
They
sent
out
no
invitations,
and
there
was
no
website
to
check
the
date.
How
do
you
do
that?
Well,
Dr.
King
wasn't
the
only
man
in
America
who
was
a
great
orator.
He
wasn't
the
only
man
in
America
who
suffered
in
a
pre-civil
rights
America.
In
fact,
some
of
his
ideas
were
bad.
But
he
had
a
gift.
He
didn't
go
around
telling
people
what
needed
to
change
in
America.
He
went
around
and
told
people
what
he
believed.
"I
believe,
I
believe,
I
believe,"
he
told
people.
And
people
who
believed
what
he
believed
took
his
cause,
and
they
made
it
their
own,
and
they
told
people.
And
some
of
those
people
created
structures
to
get
the
word
out
to
even
more
people.
And
lo
and
behold,
250,000
people
showed
up
on
the
right
day
at
the
right
time
to
hear
him
speak.
How
many
of
them
showed
up
for
him?
Zero.
They
showed
up
for
themselves.
It's
what
they
believed
about
America
that
got
them
to
travel
in
a
bus
for
eight
hours
to
stand
in
the
sun
in
Washington
in
the
middle
of
August.
It's
what
they
believed,
and
it
wasn't
about
black
versus
white:
25%
of
the
audience
was
white.
Dr.
King
believed
that
there
are
two
types
of
laws
in
this
world:
those
that
are
made
by
a
higher
authority
and
those
that
are
made
by
men.
And
not
until
all
the
laws
that
are
made
by
men
are
consistent
with
the
laws
made
by
the
higher
authority
will
we
live
in
a
just
world.
It
just
so
happened
that
the
Civil
Rights
Movement
was
the
perfect
thing
to
help
him
bring
his
cause
to
life.
We
followed,
not
for
him,
but
for
ourselves.
By
the
way,
he
gave
the
"I
have
a
dream"
speech,
not
the
"I
have
a
plan"
speech.
(Laughter)
Listen
to
politicians
now,
with
their
comprehensive
12-point
plans.
They're
not
inspiring
anybody.
Because
there
are
leaders
and
there
are
those
who
lead.
Leaders
hold
a
position
of
power
or
authority,
but
those
who
lead
inspire
us.
Whether
they're
individuals
or
organizations,
we
follow
those
who
lead,
not
because
we
have
to,
but
because
we
want
to.
We
follow
those
who
lead,
not
for
them,
but
for
ourselves.
And
it's
those
who
start
with
"why"
that
have
the
ability
to
inspire
those
around
them
or
find
others
who
inspire
them.
Thank
you
very
much.
(Applause)
Check out more TED Talks - Most Popular

See below for the full transcript

How do you explain when things don't go as we assume? Or better, how do you explain when others are able to achieve things that seem to defy all of the assumptions? For example: Why is Apple so innovative? Year after year, after year, they're more innovative than all their competition. And yet, they're just a computer company. They're just like everyone else. They have the same access to the same talent, the same agencies, the same consultants, the same media. Then why is it that they seem to have something different? Why is it that Martin Luther King led the Civil Rights Movement? He wasn't the only man who suffered in pre-civil rights America, and he certainly wasn't the only great orator of the day. Why him? And why is it that the Wright brothers were able to figure out controlled, powered man flight when there were certainly other teams who were better qualified, better funded -- and they didn't achieve powered man flight, and the Wright brothers beat them to it. There's something else at play here. About three and a half years ago, I made a discovery. And this discovery profoundly changed my view on how I thought the world worked, and it even profoundly changed the way in which I operate in it. As it turns out, there's a pattern. As it turns out, all the great inspiring leaders and organizations in the world, whether it's Apple or Martin Luther King or the Wright brothers, they all think, act and communicate the exact same way. And it's the complete opposite to everyone else. All I did was codify it, and it's probably the world's simplest idea. I call it the golden circle. Why? How? What? This little idea explains why some organizations and some leaders are able to inspire where others aren't. Let me define the terms really quickly. Every single person, every single organization on the planet knows what they do, 100 percent. Some know how they do it, whether you call it your differentiated value proposition or your proprietary process or your USP. But very, very few people or organizations know why they do what they do. And by "why" I don't mean "to make a profit." That's a result. It's always a result. By "why," I mean: What's your purpose? What's your cause? What's your belief? Why does your organization exist? Why do you get out of bed in the morning? And why should anyone care? As a result, the way we think, we act, the way we communicate is from the outside in, it's obvious. We go from the clearest thing to the fuzziest thing. But the inspired leaders and the inspired organizations -- regardless of their size, regardless of their industry -- all think, act and communicate from the inside out. Let me give you an example. I use Apple because they're easy to understand and everybody gets it. If Apple were like everyone else, a marketing message from them might sound like this: "We make great computers. They're beautifully designed, simple to use and user friendly. Want to buy one?" "Meh." That's how most of us communicate. That's how most marketing and sales are done, that's how we communicate interpersonally. We say what we do, we say how we're different or better and we expect some sort of a behavior, a purchase, a vote, something like that. Here's our new law firm: We have the best lawyers with the biggest clients, we always perform for our clients. Here's our new car: It gets great gas mileage, it has leather seats. Buy our car. But it's uninspiring. Here's how Apple actually communicates. "Everything we do, we believe in challenging the status quo. We believe in thinking differently. The way we challenge the status quo is by making our products beautifully designed, simple to use and user friendly. We just happen to make great computers. Want to buy one?" Totally different, right? You're ready to buy a computer from me. I just reversed the order of the information. What it proves to us is that people don't buy what you do; people buy why you do it. This explains why every single person in this room is perfectly comfortable buying a computer from Apple. But we're also perfectly comfortable buying an MP3 player from Apple, or a phone from Apple, or a DVR from Apple. As I said before, Apple's just a computer company. Nothing distinguishes them structurally from any of their competitors. Their competitors are equally qualified to make all of these products. In fact, they tried. A few years ago, Gateway came out with flat-screen TVs. They're eminently qualified to make flat-screen TVs. They've been making flat-screen monitors for years. Nobody bought one. Dell came out with MP3 players and PDAs, and they make great quality products, and they can make perfectly well-designed products -- and nobody bought one. In fact, talking about it now, we can't even imagine buying an MP3 player from Dell. Why would you buy one from a computer company? But we do it every day. People don't buy what you do; they buy why you do it. The goal is not to do business with everybody who needs what you have. The goal is to do business with people who believe what you believe. Here's the best part: None of what I'm telling you is my opinion. It's all grounded in the tenets of biology. Not psychology, biology. If you look at a cross-section of the human brain, from the top down, the human brain is actually broken into three major components that correlate perfectly with the golden circle. Our newest brain, our Homo sapien brain, our neocortex, corresponds with the "what" level. The neocortex is responsible for all of our rational and analytical thought and language. The middle two sections make up our limbic brains, and our limbic brains are responsible for all of our feelings, like trust and loyalty. It's also responsible for all human behavior, all decision-making, and it has no capacity for language. In other words, when we communicate from the outside in, yes, people can understand vast amounts of complicated information like features and benefits and facts and figures. It just doesn't drive behavior. When we can communicate from the inside out, we're talking directly to the part of the brain that controls behavior, and then we allow people to rationalize it with the tangible things we say and do. This is where gut decisions come from. Sometimes you can give somebody all the facts and figures, and they say, "I know what all the facts and details say, but it just doesn't feel right." Why would we use that verb, it doesn't "feel" right? Because the part of the brain that controls decision-making doesn't control language. The best we can muster up is, "I don't know. It just doesn't feel right." Or sometimes you say you're leading with your heart or soul. I hate to break it to you, those aren't other body parts controlling your behavior. It's all happening here in your limbic brain, the part of the brain that controls decision-making and not language. But if you don't know why you do what you do, and people respond to why you do what you do, then how will you ever get people to vote for you, or buy something from you, or, more importantly, be loyal and want to be a part of what it is that you do. The goal is not just to sell to people who need what you have; the goal is to sell to people who believe what you believe. The goal is not just to hire people who need a job; it's to hire people who believe what you believe. I always say that, you know, if you hire people just because they can do a job, they'll work for your money, but if they believe what you believe, they'll work for you with blood and sweat and tears. Nowhere else is there a better example than with the Wright brothers. Most people don't know about Samuel Pierpont Langley. And back in the early 20th century, the pursuit of powered man flight was like the dot com of the day. Everybody was trying it. And Samuel Pierpont Langley had, what we assume, to be the recipe for success. Even now, you ask people, "Why did your product or why did your company fail?" and people always give you the same permutation of the same three things: under-capitalized, the wrong people, bad market conditions. It's always the same three things, so let's explore that. Samuel Pierpont Langley was given 50,000 dollars by the War Department to figure out this flying machine. Money was no problem. He held a seat at Harvard and worked at the Smithsonian and was extremely well-connected; he knew all the big minds of the day. He hired the best minds money could find and the market conditions were fantastic. The New York Times followed him around everywhere, and everyone was rooting for Langley. Then how come we've never heard of Samuel Pierpont Langley? A few hundred miles away in Dayton, Ohio, Orville and Wilbur Wright, they had none of what we consider to be the recipe for success. They had no money; they paid for their dream with the proceeds from their bicycle shop. Not a single person on the Wright brothers' team had a college education, not even Orville or Wilbur. And The New York Times followed them around nowhere. The difference was, Orville and Wilbur were driven by a cause, by a purpose, by a belief. They believed that if they could figure out this flying machine, it'll change the course of the world. Samuel Pierpont Langley was different. He wanted to be rich, and he wanted to be famous. He was in pursuit of the result. He was in pursuit of the riches. And lo and behold, look what happened. The people who believed in the Wright brothers' dream worked with them with blood and sweat and tears. The others just worked for the paycheck. They tell stories of how every time the Wright brothers went out, they would have to take five sets of parts, because that's how many times they would crash before supper. And, eventually, on December 17th, 1903, the Wright brothers took flight, and no one was there to even experience it. We found out about it a few days later. And further proof that Langley was motivated by the wrong thing: the day the Wright brothers took flight, he quit. He could have said, "That's an amazing discovery, guys, and I will improve upon your technology," but he didn't. He wasn't first, he didn't get rich, he didn't get famous, so he quit. People don't buy what you do; they buy why you do it. If you talk about what you believe, you will attract those who believe what you believe. But why is it important to attract those who believe what you believe? Something called the law of diffusion of innovation, if you don't know the law, you know the terminology. The first 2.5% of our population are our innovators. The next 13.5% of our population are our early adopters. The next 34% are your early majority, your late majority and your laggards. The only reason these people buy touch-tone phones is because you can't buy rotary phones anymore. (Laughter) We all sit at various places at various times on this scale, but what the law of diffusion of innovation tells us is that if you want mass-market success or mass-market acceptance of an idea, you cannot have it until you achieve this tipping point between 15 and 18 percent market penetration, and then the system tips. I love asking businesses, "What's your conversion on new business?" They love to tell you, "It's about 10 percent," proudly. Well, you can trip over 10% of the customers. We all have about 10% who just "get it." That's how we describe them, right? That's like that gut feeling, "Oh, they just get it." The problem is: How do you find the ones that get it before doing business versus the ones who don't get it? So it's this here, this little gap that you have to close, as Jeffrey Moore calls it, "Crossing the Chasm" -- because, you see, the early majority will not try something until someone else has tried it first. And these guys, the innovators and the early adopters, they're comfortable making those gut decisions. They're more comfortable making those intuitive decisions that are driven by what they believe about the world and not just what product is available. These are the people who stood in line for six hours to buy an iPhone when they first came out, when you could have bought one off the shelf the next week. These are the people who spent 40,000 dollars on flat-screen TVs when they first came out, even though the technology was substandard. And, by the way, they didn't do it because the technology was so great; they did it for themselves. It's because they wanted to be first. People don't buy what you do; they buy why you do it and what you do simply proves what you believe. In fact, people will do the things that prove what they believe. The reason that person bought the iPhone in the first six hours, stood in line for six hours, was because of what they believed about the world, and how they wanted everybody to see them: they were first. People don't buy what you do; they buy why you do it. So let me give you a famous example, a famous failure and a famous success of the law of diffusion of innovation. First, the famous failure. It's a commercial example. As we said before, the recipe for success is money and the right people and the right market conditions. You should have success then. Look at TiVo. From the time TiVo came out about eight or nine years ago to this current day, they are the single highest-quality product on the market, hands down, there is no dispute. They were extremely well-funded. Market conditions were fantastic. I mean, we use TiVo as verb. I TiVo stuff on my piece-of-junk Time Warner DVR all the time. (Laughter) But TiVo's a commercial failure. They've never made money. And when they went IPO, their stock was at about 30 or 40 dollars and then plummeted, and it's never traded above 10. In fact, I don't think it's even traded above six, except for a couple of little spikes. Because you see, when TiVo launched their product, they told us all what they had. They said, "We have a product that pauses live TV, skips commercials, rewinds live TV and memorizes your viewing habits without you even asking." And the cynical majority said, "We don't believe you. We don't need it. We don't like it. You're scaring us." What if they had said, "If you're the kind of person who likes to have total control over every aspect of your life, boy, do we have a product for you. It pauses live TV, skips commercials, memorizes your viewing habits, etc., etc." People don't buy what you do; they buy why you do it, and what you do simply serves as the proof of what you believe. Now let me give you a successful example of the law of diffusion of innovation. In the summer of 1963, 250,000 people showed up on the mall in Washington to hear Dr. King speak. They sent out no invitations, and there was no website to check the date. How do you do that? Well, Dr. King wasn't the only man in America who was a great orator. He wasn't the only man in America who suffered in a pre-civil rights America. In fact, some of his ideas were bad. But he had a gift. He didn't go around telling people what needed to change in America. He went around and told people what he believed. "I believe, I believe, I believe," he told people. And people who believed what he believed took his cause, and they made it their own, and they told people. And some of those people created structures to get the word out to even more people. And lo and behold, 250,000 people showed up on the right day at the right time to hear him speak. How many of them showed up for him? Zero. They showed up for themselves. It's what they believed about America that got them to travel in a bus for eight hours to stand in the sun in Washington in the middle of August. It's what they believed, and it wasn't about black versus white: 25% of the audience was white. Dr. King believed that there are two types of laws in this world: those that are made by a higher authority and those that are made by men. And not until all the laws that are made by men are consistent with the laws made by the higher authority will we live in a just world. It just so happened that the Civil Rights Movement was the perfect thing to help him bring his cause to life. We followed, not for him, but for ourselves. By the way, he gave the "I have a dream" speech, not the "I have a plan" speech. (Laughter) Listen to politicians now, with their comprehensive 12-point plans. They're not inspiring anybody. Because there are leaders and there are those who lead. Leaders hold a position of power or authority, but those who lead inspire us. Whether they're individuals or organizations, we follow those who lead, not because we have to, but because we want to. We follow those who lead, not for them, but for ourselves. And it's those who start with "why" that have the ability to inspire those around them or find others who inspire them. Thank you very much. (Applause)

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