A list of EA-relevant business books I’ve read
Some have suggested EA is too insular and needs to learn from other fields. In this vein, I think there are important mental models from the for-profit world that are underutilized by non-profits.
After all, business can be thought of as the study of how to accomplish goals as an organization—how to get things done in the real world. EA needs the right mix of theory and real world execution. If you replace the word “profit” with “impact”, you’ll find a large percentage of lessons can be cross-applied.
Eight months ago, I challenged myself to read a book a day for a year. I’ve been posting daily summaries on social media and had enough EAs reach out to me for book recs that, inspired by Michael Aird and Anna Riedl, I thought it might be worth sharing my all-time favorites here.
Below are the best ~50 out of the ~500 books I read in the past few years. I’m an entrepreneur so they’re mostly business-related. Bold = extra-recommended.
If you’d like any more specific recommendations feel free to leave a comment and I can try to be helpful.
Also—I’m hosting an unofficial entrepreneur meetup at EAG Bay Area. Message me on SwapCard for details or think it might be high impact to connect :)
The best ~50 books:
Fundraising:
Leadership/Management:
The Hard Thing About Hard Things: Building a Business When There Are No Easy Answers
The Advantage: Why Organizational Health Trumps Everything Else In Business
The Coaching Habit: Say Less, Ask More & Change the Way You Lead Forever
Entrepreneurship/Startups:
The Founder’s Dilemmas: Anticipating and Avoiding the Pitfalls That Can Sink a Startup
The Startup Owner’s Manual: The Step-By-Step Guide for Building a Great Company
Strategy/Innovation:
Operations/Get Shit Done:
The Phoenix Project: A Novel about IT, DevOps, and Helping Your Business Win
Making Work Visible: Exposing Time Theft to Optimize Work & Flow
Statistics/Forecasting:
Writing/Storytelling:
Product/Design/User Experience:
The Cold Start Problem: How to Start and Scale Network Effects
The Lean Product Playbook: How to Innovate with Minimum Viable Products and Rapid Customer Feedback
Psychology/Influence:
SPIN Selling (unfortunate acronym)
Outreach/Marketing/Advocacy:
80⁄20 Sales and Marketing: The Definitive Guide to Working Less and Making More
Traction: How Any Startup Can Achieve Explosive Customer Growth
How to learn things faster:
Ultralearning: Master Hard Skills, Outsmart the Competition, and Accelerate Your Career
The Little Book of Talent: 52 Tips for Improving Your Skills
Personal Development:
The Confident Mind: A Battle-Tested Guide to Unshakable Performance
The Almanack of Naval Ravikant: A Guide to Wealth and Happiness
Recruiting/Hiring:
Negotiating:
Never Split the Difference: Negotiating As If Your Life Depended On It
Secrets of Power Negotiating: Inside Secrets from a Master Negotiator
Business Biographies:
Elon Musk: Tesla, SpaceX, and the Quest for a Fantastic Future
Creativity, Inc.: Overcoming the Unseen Forces That Stand in the Way of True Inspiration
Red Notice: A True Story of High Finance, Murder, and One Man’s Fight for Justice
If you’re not a book person, here are the best articles to read before launching a startup.
For more, here are 100 books that just missed the cut:
Fundraising:
Operations/Get Shit Done:
Leadership/Management:
The Outsiders: Eight Unconventional CEOs and Their Radically Rational Blueprint for Success
Death by Meeting: A Leadership Fable...About Solving the Most Painful Problem in Business
First, Break All the Rules: What the World’s Greatest Managers Do Differently
Statistics/Forecasting:
Nudge: Improving Decisions About Money, Health, and the Environment
Algorithms to Live By: The Computer Science of Human Decisions
Entrepreneurship/Startups:
Super Founders: What Data Reveals About Billion-Dollar Startups
Disciplined Entrepreneurship: 24 Steps to a Successful Startup
High Growth Handbook: Scaling Startups From 10 to 10,000 People
From Impossible to Inevitable: How SaaS and Other Hyper-Growth Companies Create Predictable Revenue
The Minimalist Entrepreneur: How Great Founders Do More with Less
The Lean Marketplace: A Practical Guide to Building a Successful Online Marketplace Business
Zero to IPO: Over $1 Trillion of Actionable Advice from the World’s Most Successful Entrepreneurs
The Startup Playbook: Founder-to-Founder Advice From Two Startup Veterans
Strategy/Innovation:
Understanding Michael Porter: The Essential Guide to Competition and Strategy
The Innovator’s Dilemma: When New Technologies Cause Great Firms to Fail
The Innovator’s Solution: Creating and Sustaining Successful Growth
Levers: The Framework for Building Repeatability into Your Business
Innovation Tournaments: Creating and Selecting Exceptional Opportunities
Writing/Storytelling:
The Elements of Eloquence: Secrets of the Perfect Turn of Phrase
The Addiction Formula (written about music, but you can cross-apply the ideas to writing)
Nobody Wants to Read Your Sh*t: Why That Is And What You Can Do About It
Product:
UX for Lean Startups: Faster, Smarter User Experience Research and Design
Product-Led Growth: How to Build a Product That Sells Itself
Continuous Discovery Habits: Discover Products that Create Customer Value and Business Value
Product-Led SEO: The Why Behind Building Your Organic Growth Strategy
User Story Mapping: Discover the Whole Story, Build the Right Product
UX Strategy: Product Strategy Techniques for Devising Innovative Digital Solutions
Psychology/Persuasion/Influence:
Pitch Anything: An Innovative Method for Presenting, Persuading, and Winning the Deal
Brainfluence: 100 Ways to Persuade and Convince Consumers with Neuromarketing
The Challenger Sale: Taking Control of the Customer Conversation
Exactly What to Say: The Magic Words for Influence and Impact
Outreach/Marketing:
Hacking Growth: How Today’s Fastest-Growing Companies Drive Breakout Success
Content Machine: Use Content Marketing to Build a 7-figure Business With Zero Advertising
Dotcom Secrets: The Underground Playbook for Growing Your Company Online with Sales Funnels
How to learn things faster:
Personal Development:
Networking:
Never Eat Alone, and Other Secrets to Success, One Relationship at a Time
How to Talk to Anyone: 92 Little Tricks for Big Success in Relationships
Business Biographies:
The History of the Future: Oculus, Facebook, and the Revolution That Swept Virtual Reality
Billion Dollar Loser: The Epic Rise and Spectacular Fall of Adam Neumann and WeWork
How to Win at the Sport of Business: If I Can Do It, You Can Do It (Mark Cuban)
The Innovation Stack: Building an Unbeatable Business One Crazy Idea at a Time
Hatching Twitter: A True Story of Money, Power, Friendship, and Betrayal
Why Startups Fail: A New Roadmap for Entrepreneurial Success
Liftoff: Elon Musk and the Desperate Early Days That Launched SpaceX
The Ride of a Lifetime: Lessons Learned from 15 Years as CEO of the Walt Disney Company
Reminder that you can listen to LessWrong and EA Forum posts like this on your podcast player using the Nonlinear Library.
Drew—thanks very much for sharing this list. I agree that anybody trying to get stuff done within or through an organization or subculture can benefit from reading good business books.
I would offer the caveat that a lot of business books have an odd mix of strengths and weaknesses, which seem endemic to the genre. (I’m generalizing here, as an interested observer who read a couple of hundred books on management, marketing, and advertising when I was writing my stuff on the psychology of runaway consumerism and economic signaling.)
On the upside, good business books tend to be short, clearly written, engaging, motivating, and unpretentious—they’re intended to be read on airplanes by busy, ambitious middle managers.
On the downside, many business books offer strongly worded advice based on no empirical data, or second-hand outdated psychology studies, or cherrypicked pop statistics about particular products, ads, or markets. (You would not believe how many billion-dollar ad campaigns are based on obsolete psychology theories and flashy findings that have failed to replicate.) So, these books are often worth reading, but the empirical claims need to be taken with some degree of skepticism!
As a follow-up post, it might be helpful for you to focus on a couple of your key categories and add a couple of sentences for each book about your most memorable/useful/actionable takeaways.
Echoing this, I’ve also found that many business books are simply variations of “here is what worked for me in this specific situation, which I am now proselytizing as a general rule.” I do wish that there were more business books that were explanations of business research, or popularizing of academic papers.
For organizational psychology I have found the works of Adam Grant to be quite good at explaining the research
Thanks for sharing
Definitely!
Well put! I used to pitch EA as the “business approach to charity”, but that view has fallen out of favour with the rise of the philosophers
Thanks for writing this up! The Forum could always use more lists and recommendations. Upvoted.
I might be reading too much into this, but I found it confusing:
I wouldn’t expect people in EA to systematically neglect good business advice (at least, not to any greater degree than other entrepreneurs and charity founders do).
The “insular” critique mostly applies to areas where people in EA tend to favor sources that share their philosophical foundations and speak directly to their concerns. For example, they might care more about utilitarian philosophy than deontology, or more about development economics than anthropology, because those fields typically assume a commitment to measuring/maximizing impact.
By contrast, business writing already tends to be focused on measurement and maximization, so it fits the profile of “stuff I’d expect people in EA to like”.
To the extent that business books aren’t discussed much in EA, I think that’s largely a consequence of many Forum users being either researchers, students, or non-managerial staff at large orgs (e.g. software engineers), such that they don’t have much incentive to seek out this material. (I think that the most common books we rate on Goodreads reflect this.)
*****
This doesn’t take away from the utility of a list like this, of course!
But I feel like I hear a lot of offhand remarks that imply people in EA don’t care about anything that isn’t obviously linked to our particular nerdy interests, and that hasn’t been my experience. The managers and entrepreneurs I know in the movement are often well-read in the kinds of material presented here, and mostly seek to run their projects based on standard best practices from the for-profit world. (With a few minor quirks — more transparency, less hierarchy, more friendliness.)
See also:
https://forum.effectivealtruism.org/posts/bZPzDgF9nEXNnGgct/the-allegedly-best-business-books-1
I’m so pleased to people referring to my post. :) Thanks!
Great list Drew. Big Thanks for sharing this.
I have read some books in the list but there are many others I haven’t read so I consider this a goldmine and I have since bookmarked the post.
I also do have a few suggestions to add. Highly recommended.
Personal Development
Black Box Thinking: Why Most People Never Learn from Their Mistakes—But Some Do
Operations/Get Shit Done
Deep Work: Rules for Focused Success in a Distracted World (This one is a bit wordy especially if you don’t like stories so much, but lots of useful information lies within)
Bonus for those who like fiction (this one is fiction and not exactly related to business but ranks very high on my “list of books to read before you die” and I believe its a series everyone should try and read):
The Three Body Problem (Trilogy)
Love the podcast, comes in very handy in keeping up with developments on the forum. kudos to the team.
This is the post that I was planning to write! Good job beating me to it. I’ve picked up some new recommendations today.
Did you consider Tyler Cowen and Daniel Gross’s Talent for the Recruiting/Hiring category?
I haven’t! Do you recommend it?
Just read it and liked it a lot! Added to the recruiting/hiring category.
The link seems to be broken. Anyone happen to know where this should be pointing?