Billionaires And Their Reading Habits

Facebook Twitter

Do you know that successful people share a common habit that makes them successful? Almost every successful people read, and they read a lot.

Elon Musk, one of the most inspirational entrepreneurs of our time, the man behind Tesla, SpaceX, and SolarCity, said that he read about 10 hours a day when he was in grade school.

Elon was once asked how he learned to build rockets and how he managed to get all the ideas from, he answered, “I read books”.

And the same habit can be found with other successful people such as Warren Buffett, Bill Gates, Mark Cuban, Oprah Winfrey, Jack Canfield, Anthony Robbins, Richard Branson, Mark Zuckerberg and more.

While it is true that many successful people like Steve Jobs, Bill Gates and Warren Buffett dropped out from their schools, but that did not stop them from pursuing knowledge and improving themselves.

These people understand that if they want to get ahead in life, they need to consistently improve their knowledge and enhancing their skills, through reading.

Tony Robbins, the world-famous success coach coined the term, “CANI”, which means Constant-And-Never-ending-Improvement, and he emphasized that the importance of reading and improving ourselves if we want to be successful in our lives.

In Japanese, the word “Kaizen” is often associated with “CANI” and it is one of the Japanese’s principles in how they handle everything in their lives. This is why the Japanese able to improve fast and stay ahead.

Reading Habits of Billionaires

Let us look at some of the famous billionaires reading habits and how these ultra successful people made it in life.

Warren Buffet

The Chairman and CEO of Berkshire Hathaway, the top three richest man in the world said that he spends about 5 to 6 hours a day reading at least 5 newspapers and also read through pages and pages of financial documents every single day.

Buffet is a voracious reader and consumed many books including his favorite, The Intelligent Investor by Benjamin Graham. It is said that Buffet read the book many times before he made his investment in the stock market. Even today, Buffet still recommends the book to other investors.

Warren Buffet spends around 80% of his time reading. And he also recommends books to read in his annual shareholder letters.

Bill Gates

The former CEO of Microsoft and the richest man in the world said that he read about 50 books a year, or about a book a week. Gates has his own collections of books and library and he is an avid reader.

In a Forbes interview with Bill Gate’s dad, his dad said that his son is a bookworm:

“Just about every kind of book interested him – encyclopedias, science fiction, you name it. I was thrilled that my child was such an avid reader, but he read so much that Bill’s mother and I had to institute a rule: no books at the dinner table.”

Gates also shared more than 150 books recommendations through his personal blog, “GatesNotes”.

Mark Cuban

Mark Cuban is a billionaire and the owner of Dallas Mavericks. He spends about 3 hours reading every day and he attributed his early career success in life to reading. He will read just about anything that has to do with the industry he is in. He wants to learn more about the industry and become great in it.

He once wrote in his blog about his reading’s material, “Everything I read was public. Anyone could buy the same books and magazines. The same information was available to anyone who wanted it. Turns out most people didn’t want it.”

This clearly shows that Mark Cuban dedicates a lot of his success to his reading habits and he agrees that reading is one of the key factors to success in life.

Oprah Winfrey

Everyone knows that Oprah is a reader and she strongly recommends her talk-show viewers to adopt the habit of reading. She even started her Oprah’s Book Club and the books that were featured in her book club will become an instant bestseller.

Oprah often refers to reading as her “path to freedom” due to the tough start in her career. She said that books widen her imagination and see the world beyond the front porch of her grandmother’s shotgun house. In other words, she implies that books give her the possibilities to move forward and achieve more in life.

Oprah said that she learned to read at age 3 and soon she discovered that there was a whole new world to conquer through reading. She even suggested children spend about 30 minutes on reading each day and make it a habit.

Mark Zuckerberg

Mark Zuckerberg, the Facebook founder and the billionaire with a net worth of more than $70 billion is a strong believer in reading. Mark believes that if you want to improve the quality of your life, you must commit to personal growth and development. Success does leave clues after all.

In 2015, Mark posted on his Facebook page that he challenged himself to read a book each week for the entire year. He even created a fanpage called ‘A Year of Books’ and posted the books that he has read and updated his progress.

Elon Musk

Like all other successful billionaires, Elon Musk devoted a huge chunk of his time to reading when he was young. When he was in grade school, he read about ten hours a day. He read everything in his library and he even read the entire Encyclopedia Britannica. Besides, he also completed a six-month BASIC course in just three days.

Charlie Munger

Being the vice chairman of Berkshire Hathaway, Charlie Munger has a net worth of approximately $1.4 billion. And just like the CEO of Berkshire Hathaway Warren Buffet, Charlie loves to read.

Charlie even jokes that he reads so much that his children think that he is a book with a couple of legs sticking out. Here is what he said about reading:

“Warren and I do more reading and thinking and less doing than most people in business. We do that because we like that kind of a life. But we’ve turned that quirk into a positive outcome for ourselves. We both insist on a lot of time being available almost every day to just sit and think. That is very uncommon in American business. We read and think.”

Richard Branson

Being the boss behind Virgin Group, billionaire Branson has a net worth of around $5 billion and he too is an avid reader just like Bill Gates and Warren Buffet. In honor of World Book Day, Branson shared 65 books that he thinks that everyone could benefit from reading during their lifetime.

Branson said that he wakes up as early as 5am to kick start his day. He said that he would spend time reading, exercising, and spending time with his family. And this puts him in the right frame of mind to start his day productively.

Jack Dorsey

As the CEO and co-founder of Twitter and Square, Jack Dorsey is a busy man managing two companies at the same time. No doubt that he is a great leader and also a great reader. He focused on pushing himself and offers recommendations on his favorite book titles too. From time to time, Jack shares his favorite book titles through Twitter.

Jeff Bezos

Everyone knows that Jeff Bezos is a billionaire and he started Amazon, ‘The Everything Store’ from selling books online. And soon enough, Amazon sells basically anything you need in life. The company grows tremendously from selling just books to everything you need each day within a decade.

And just like most other successful people, Jeff Bezos has a habit of reading books too. Bezos is very passionate about books and reading. And in the appendix of Brad Stone’s book on Amazon, there is a list of books called “Jeff’s Reading List”. You can find the books recommended by Jeff Bezos there.

Why Is Reading Important To Your Success?

Now you understand how successful people are able to achieve outstanding results in their lives. They improve themselves every single day through reading. They read a lot and they learn from books.

So when was the last time you read a book? People today spend more time in social media checking updates than they spend time in reading and improving themselves. If you want to be successful and produce extraordinary results in your life, start by making reading your habit.

We all know that reading is important and it is a must-have ingredient to success, but are you doing it? Do you even know why reading is important?

1. Enhances Your Imagination

Do you know that reading can enhance your imagination and boost your creativity? Just like what Oprah Winfrey said, she found a whole new world of possibilities through reading.

When you read, you are reading from other people’s experiences and the author’s thinking. Imagine when you read a book written by a billionaire or a successful entrepreneur, you are truly reading is the author’s thinking and experiences.

Therefore, this will boost your creativity to think and enhance your imagination to what is possible to achieve in your life as well.

Remember, you are not limited by your resources and who you are right now. And through reading, you can see what is possible in your life.

More importantly, our brain actually thinks in pictures. And when you read, your mind is crafting and imagining the pictures in your head. It helps in improving your visualization skills.

2. Train Your Focus and Concentration

In today’s world, we are constantly distracted by the instant messaging App, the social media and also the buzz from our smartphones. It is difficult to stay focused and complete one task when your friend can share something interesting with you through Facebook or message you with Whatsapp and that requires your instant attention.

In a single 15 minutes, an average person has to divide their time into their work, checking email, chatting with other people through instant messaging, keep their eyes on Twitter and Facebook, and also pay attention to their cell phones.

Things will be different when you read a book. Reading requires your attention to focus on the words. And when you put your full attention into reading, the rest of the world just fades away and you are in the world sucking up knowledge from the book.

If you are not used to reading, it will be a little challenging in the beginning because your mind will wander around and look for something else to do.

However, as you stick to the reading and continue to focus your thought on the words, you are taking control of your mind and training it to concentrate on the task at hand, which is reading.

Science has shown that reading can make you more focused and improve your concentration.

3. Improves Your Memory

Besides that, when you are reading books, you tend to remember the story, the characters, their background, the keywords, the points, the important events and so on. This will improve your memory and make you remember things better.

It may seem a little bit too much to remember, but do not forget that your brain is one of the most powerful tools you ever possessed. Your brain can remember easily and it has a vast capacity. Whenever you needed that information, your brain will recall and get you the info you need.

Studies have also shown that when you read, you are staying mentally stimulated and this will slow the progress of brain aging, preventing illnesses like Alzheimer’s and Dementia.

When you read, you keep your brain active and your mind is engaging with the materials you read. This is just like you are exercising your mental muscle, increasing your brain power.

4. Personal Improvement

Do you know that one of the easiest ways to gain knowledge and to improve yourself is through reading? Most people can read, but unfortunately, they choose not to. They prefer to watch TV and to spend time on unnecessary activities that have nothing to do with improving their lives.

Imagine if you read just 2 books a month, and within a year, you will have read 24 books. And if each book you read is able to give you an inspiration, you will have 24 ideas and inspirations to improve your life.

Even if you just able to grasp 2 ideas out of the 24 books you read, you will still be better off than most people who never read a book after their graduation.

This is why reading is so important in developing you to become a better person. And this also explains how successful people like Mark Cuban and Elon Musk able to learn and achieve outstanding success in life.

5. Reading Can Motivate You

One of the most important benefits anyone can get from reading is motivation. Everyone knows that motivation comes and go. And those who are successful are those who are able to maintain their motivation and persevere until the end.

Thus, you need to read inspirational books to get motivation from time to time. In fact, many successful people read biographies of their idols and they learn a lot from other successful people through books.

You can do the same. Who do you want to model in your industry? If you are in tech, most likely you will go for Steve Jobs and Mark Zuckerberg. If you are into e-commerce, you may want to read about Jack Ma of Alibaba. If you are into stock investment, you can read a lot about Warren Buffet.

These books will inspire you and motivate you to go further in pursuing your dreams.

6. Communication Development

This is common sense. When you read, you will increase your vocabulary because you exposed yourself to more words and writing styles.

When you can communicate and express yourself better, it will be a great help in your career. And when you can speak up and express yourself better, you will have better self-confidence.

7. Reduce Stress and Promote Tranquility

Depending on the subject of the books you read, reading can make you feel relax and reduce your stress.

Studies have shown that reading spiritual texts can lower your blood pressure and bring a sense of calm. At the same time, reading personal development books can help in lowering mood disorders and mental illness.

There are plenty of benefits you can receive from reading books. Therefore, commit and make it a habit to read. It is crucial if you want to become the best in your industry and create extraordinary results in life.

How to Develop Habits of Reading

Now that you understand reading is an important part of your life. If you want to get ahead, move forward, produce an outstanding result in both your professional and personal life, achieve your goals and make your dreams come true, adopt the habit of reading.

The challenging part is that most people find it difficult to read, let alone make it a habit. Do not worry; here are some effective ways to easily help you develop the habit of reading so that you too, can reap the reward from this productive action.

However, before you develop the reading habit, you must understand that anyone can turn reading into a habit. If you find that reading is boring, it is because the book you choose to read is boring, or it can be that you are still to identify your reading goals.

Once you knew that reading can be fun, engaging and helpful in your life, you will be more willing to spend more time in doing it and making the habit stick.

1) Set Your Reading Goals

In order to make it a habit to read, you must first set it as a goal. And of course, like achieving any other goal, you must come up with a strong reason as to why you want to read and make it a habit.

When you have a strong reason supporting your action, you will commit to your action and stick to it. And if your reason is not strong enough, you will choose not to do it. You will procrastinate and you will choose to do other things rather than reading books.

So identify your reading goals. How many books do you want to read in a year? Or how many books do you want to read by the end of this year?

On average, people will set to read 24 or 12 books a year. And that means you will either read a book or two within a month. It is a great start and a good milestone to hit.

2) List Down The Books To Read

After you have set your reading target, list down the book titles that you want to read.

Depending on which area you want to improve in your life, you can choose the categories of books you want to read.

For instance, if you are into business, you can read a few autobiographies from famous people, some self-help business books and maybe one or two fiction books that relate to your business.

And knowing what books to read is important because if you choose the books that you have no passion to read and to learn from, you will feel boring to read. This will lower your motivation and make you procrastinate.

So how do you choose the right book to read? The answer is simple, start from the bestsellers list. You can browse Amazon’s review and check out Google on the best titles to read in your industry. And you can start from those.

You don’t have to buy all the books that you want to read within the year, you can go slowly and just buy one a month.

Whenever you have finished reading the book, pay a visit to your local bookstore and buy the next book. If you can’t find the book you want, get it from Amazon instead.

3) Make It A Habit To Read Every Day

In order to make reading your habit, you must do it every single day and if possible, stick to the same schedule each day.

You can choose to read 30 or 50 pages or you can choose to read for 30 or 60 minutes a day. Both measurements will work. The important key is to make sure that you do it every day.

Studies have shown that the best time to read is early in the morning upon waking up and at night before you sleep.

If you want to develop the reading habit in the morning, wake up a little early and spend the time into reading. Stick to the habit each day regardless of whether it rains or snow. Even if you are traveling, choose to stick to the habit and do not miss it.

4) Reward Yourself

Unless you enjoy reading and you have made it a habit, choose to reward yourself once you fulfilled your target.

For example, if your target is to read 30 minutes a day and you have done that, you can reward yourself by taking a snack, rest and give yourself a pat on the back and so on. Another great way to reward yourself is to make a cup of your favorite beverage and enjoy it while reading.

The act of rewarding yourself is important because you want to train your brain to associate reading equal fun and something to look forward to.

This is important in the progress of developing the reading habit that you desire.

5) Build Encouraging Reading Environment

Whenever you want to read, make sure you are in an environment that is encouraging. Stop visiting the busy coffee house to read. When it is noisy, it will distract you and take your attention away.

Make sure the lighting in the room is bright enough for you to read. You do not want to spend an hour each day reading in a dark room and only to find that it damages your eyesight after a year.

Get a good reading chair when possible. It will be a tool worth your investment. When you can sit comfortably and read in a quiet environment, it will encourage you to read more.

6) Jot Down Ideas And Inspirations

Don’t just read books for the sake of reading. You are not in school and nobody is there to force you to read. Remember your purpose of reading. You want to improve your skills and within your knowledge.

So read the books and whenever you come across any ideas and insights that inspire you, jot them down. Get a journal and write down everything that you have learned from reading books.

Do you know that billionaire entrepreneur Richard Branson carries a small notebook with him wherever he goes? He will write down every idea that he comes across and what he needs to get done, including insights he gets from reading books.

7) Carry A Book With You At All Time

Try to bring a book with you all the time. You can keep the book in your bag and whenever you are free, take it out and read it. You don’t have to waste your precious time waiting for your client. You can utilize your commute time and turn it into your improvement time.

This may not be easy to accomplish because not everyone is willing to carry a book with them all the time and it is easy to kill time by playing with your smartphones.

However, time is a precious commodity that once you have lost it, it will be gone forever. Hence, rather than wasting your time on unproductive tasks such as checking updates on Facebook or watching YouTube, use the time for improvement and it will bring you a great reward in the future.

8) Create A Reading Day

From time to time, perhaps, once or twice a month, you can create a reading day where you devote most of the time into reading. This is a good practice as you spend your day reading and finish the entire book.

You can visit a café or simply read in a park. Choose a good venue and once you feel saturated, change a venue.

A reading day is good because you do the reading all at a time and this allows your mind to focus on the same subject that allows you to learn everything fast in a day or two.

9) Exchange Ideas And Insights

One of the most effective ways of learning is sharing or teaching. When you share your knowledge with others, you are enhancing the memory in your mind on the knowledge. Plus, when you know that you have to share or teach others what you have read, you will read with a learning mindset and you will try to distill every golden nugget from the book.

You can form a reading group or a mastermind group for sharing information from books. Furthermore, when you have the commitment to share, you will stick to your habit and read the book as you do not want to break your promise and disappoint your partners or team mates.

10) Know When To Give Up Reading

You have to understand that not every book will be appealing to you. If your passion is in business and you read a book about art, there is a high chance that you will feel bored and sleepy after reading the first page.

You should try to read further or give the book a few more reading sessions before you decide to give up on it. And when you give up on a book, it does not mean that you should throw the book away and never read it again. It simply means that you stop reading it for now and when there’s a chance, you may want to pick up the book again and read it.

Knowledge, growth, and improvement are important parts if you want to produce extraordinary results and achieve outstanding success in your life.

And the best part is that anyone can pick up a book and read. You can become an avid reader and pursue knowledge and strive for growth in your career, your business, your finance, your fitness, your relationship, and your mental health through reading books.

All you need to do to become better each day is to commit to reading and develop it into a habit that will make you successful in life.

References

Why Successful People Read More Books

Why Successful People Read More Books

6 Shares LinkedIn

Facebook

Twitter

Email

More

Why is it that so many successful people seem to come up with idea after idea?

Not all their ideas will turn into raging successes. Some may be spectacular flops. But many will turn out to be phenomenal successes.

What is the value of one good idea to them – a game-changing one? What is the value of one good idea to you? When was the last time you even had a good idea? Where do good ideas come from?

I have read countless times that the most successful people read about 50 books each year. Philanthropist Bill Gates, co-founder of Microsoft, reads over 50 books each year. He makes book recommendations, so people can get a glimpse of the kinds of books that influence him. Billionaire Mark Cuban, owner of Dallas Mavericks, reads for over three hours every day. And there are many stories of other highly accomplished people doing the same. Do they invest so much time reading books because they know something that most of us do not?

“About a quarter of American adults (24%) say they haven’t read a book in whole or in part in the past year [2017], whether in print, electronic or audio form,” says Pew Research.

Are you among those who haven’t read a book in whole or in part in the past 12 months? If the most successful people in the world, some of which are busy running companies, make the time to read, what excuse do any of us have?

In over 20 years of interviewing highly accomplished individuals, here are some common reasons they report why they read so many books.

Gain insights.

Discover guidelines to live by.

Secure formulas and intellectual frameworks to use.

Gain a deeper understanding and heightened awareness.

Discover new ways of thinking.

Gain an understanding of cultures, civilization and the world.

Awake/Ignite something within.

Get words of comfort and hope during difficult times.

The more books successful people read, the more they amplify the benefits and results of reading. They reap the benefits of compound interest as they continue to build on what they know. For you to learn from their experiences, it is simply not about reading more books. They have many reading secrets that I would like to share with you. These secrets will give you reasons for reading more of the right books. Successful people read more books, but they also read more of the right books. The books that are more likely to have game-changing ideas.

Secret One: Few Books Are Worthy of Being Read Cover-to-Cover

You are struggling now because you were taught to finish every book you start to read. Highly accomplished readers have mastered the art of only reading the ‘meaty’ sections of a book. They pre-scan each book before they start to read. This means they read the table of contents, introduction, preface, about the author, and so on. If something catches their eyes when viewing the table of contents, they will read a page or two here and there. After pre-scanning the book, they have a good sense of what the book is about, and which sections to now focus on.

Secret Two: Take Notes When Reading Instead of Relying on Memory

Whenever they read a book, they take the time to write detailed notes, writing the information in their own words, and linking it to what they already know. But the process does not end there for them. Additionally, they review their notes a few times, then pick out the big ideas and key takeaways. Because they make the words in the book theirs, they have a deeper understanding of what the text is about.

Secret Three: Have to Read More Books to Find the Idea in the Haystack

Not every book will contain a million dollar or even thousand-dollar idea. But the more books they read the more likely they will get there. It is seldom that you will get a fully-formed idea. Most times you will have to work with what you have. There are times when you have to combine ideas from different books to get the one that will change lives. Successful people know this.

Secret Four: Profit Reading – Turn Ideas into Action

We talked about what an idea is worth to successful people. They turn the ideas they mine from the books they read into actionable steps because they know the right idea could be worth thousands, even millions of dollars. They have also mastered the art of adapting and applying what they have learned from the books.

What does this mean for an ordinary person like you and me?

The ability to get ideas that will transform lives are not for the chosen few. You can develop the habit, starting with reading more books. Reading intelligently enables you to read more books. Now that you know some of the secrets of the highly accomplished, start following their actions today.

How much is a good idea worth to you?

If you need help reading more of the right books, join my Strategic Reading Challenge.

If you click on any of the book links and make a purchase, Amazon pays me a small commission.

Steve Jobs Shoe Dog: A Memoir by the Creator of Nike Faust: Parts I & II Memoirs Of A Geisha Seven Pillars of Wisdom (Wordsworth Classics of World Literature) Gilgamesh: A New English Version

13 Successful People on the Books That Changed Their Lives

Need a book recommendation for a young, out-of-work, or fledgling wild-card on your Christmas list? Or some words of wisdom to pump up your own bookshelf?

We got you.

Money compiled a reading list of the books several CEOs, COOs and company founders say changed the trajectory of their lives. Some are tried and true career inspirations like The Art of War, while others are literary classics or feats of investigative journalism such as A Wrinkle in Time or The New Jim Crow. All helped launch some of the most inspiring careers of our time.

Jeff Bezos

Gary Cameron—Reuters

The Remains of the Day by Kazuo Ishiguro

"Bezos has said he learns more from novels than nonfiction," author Brad Stone writes in a biography of Amazon’s head honcho. Ishiguro’s portrayal of post-World War II England tops “Jeff’s Reading List,” a list of books widely referenced by Amazon employees, according to Stone.

“If you read The Remains of the Day, which is one of my favorite books, you can't help but come away and think, I just spent 10 hours living an alternate life and I learned something about life and about regret,” Bezos told Newsweek in 2009. “You can't do that in a blog post.”

Sheryl Sandberg

Michael Short—Getty Images

A Wrinkle in Time, Madeleine L’Engle

In an interview for the New York Times, the Facebook COO and Lean In author says she connected with the “admittedly geeky heroine” of Madeleine L’Engle’s fantasy novel at a young age.

“I wanted to be Meg Murry,” the tech exec says. “I loved how she worked with others to fight against an unjust system and how she fought to save her family against very long odds.”

Richard Plepler

Kevin Mazur—Getty Images for SeriousFun

The Stories of John Cheever, John Cheever

In another Times column, HBO CEO Richard Plepler calls fiction writer John Cheever's collection of short stories “a jewel” that he frequently rereads.

“My dad gave me the Cheever book for my 20th birthday,” Plepler says. “There’s a lot in there about what Kant called ‘the crooked timber of humanity.’ It’s a masterpiece.”

Mark Zuckerberg

Paul Marotta/Getty Images

The New Jim Crow, Michelle Alexander

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg became a strong advocate for criminal justice reform after reading civil rights lawyer Michelle Alexander’s 2010 book on mass incarceration.

In a 2015 Facebook post, Zuckerberg said the book inspired him to visit San Quentin State Prison. “I’m going to keep learning about this topic, but some things are already clear. We can’t jail our way to a just society, and our current system isn't working.” In May, the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative, a charity co-founded by Zuckerberg and his wife Dr. Priscilla Chan, donated $6.5 million to data project aimed at shining a light on injustices in the court system.

Satya Nadella

Drew Angerer—Getty Images

Mindset: The New Psychology of Success, Carol Dweck

The current Microsoft CEO turned to his wife for a book recommendation and it ended up changing his outlook forever. In a recent interview with the Wall Street Journal, he explained that Mindset "is about fixed mind-sets versus growth mind-sets—when you have a growth mind-set, you’re always willing to learn. I started thinking about what was happening in my head and asked whether as a company we have a learning culture. Do we have curiosity?"

The big takeaway? "The “learn-it-all” will always do better than the “know-it-all," he says.

John Chambers

Isa Harsin—Sipa via AP Images; (inset) Historical Picture Archive—Corbis via Getty Images

The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Mark Twain

In an interview for the Silicon Valley newspaper The Mercury News, Cisco's recently-departed CEO says Mark Twain’s watershed novel helped him learn to manage dyslexia as a young person.

“It was a book that helped me turn one of my greatest challenges into a strength,” he says.

Carol Bartz

Ramin Talaie/Corbis via Getty Images

“I loved everything Nancy Drew,” Bartz, the former Yahoo CEO told The Mercury News. “She was smart, in control and lived an exciting life — plus she had a sports car.”

Indra Nooyi

Pradeep Gaur—Mint via Getty Images

The Road to Character, David Brooks

In 2015, Pepsi CEO Nooyi told Fortune that New York Times columnist David Brooks’ account of historical adversity, “sparked a wonderful discussion with my two daughters about why building inner character is just as important as building a career.”

“In fact,” she continues, “the two go hand in hand—the moral compass of our lives must also be the moral compass of our livelihoods.”

Jeff Weiner

Eric Risberg—AP

The Art of Happiness, the Dalai Lama

In a Q&A with the Silicon Valley Business Journal, LinkedIn's Weiner credits the Dalai Lama’s spiritual classic for teaching him “the true definition of compassion.”

“That is like a first principle when it comes to the way I aspire to manage,” Weiner says. “And I keep saying ‘aspire’ because it’s hard to do.”

Bill Gates

Chris Goodney—Bloomberg via Getty Images

The Better Angels of Our Nature, Steven Pinker

In a May tweet aimed at new graduates, Gates calls Steven Pinker’s bestseller “the most inspiring book” he’s ever read.

Gates goes on to say that the 2011 book, which asserts that violence has declined across times, shows “how the world is getting better.”

“It doesn’t mean you ignore the serious problems we face,” Gates writes. “It just means you believe they can be solved."

Warren Buffett

Daniel Zuchnik—WireImage/Getty Images

The Intelligent Investor, Benjamin Graham

The "Oracle of Omaha" is a big reader - but one book in particular stands out to him. In an interview with Charlie Rose earlier this year, he said a 1949 business book, The Intelligent Investor, is tops. The book preaches value investing, or buying stocks when they are really low and holding on for them to for a long, long time. "I just happened to pick up that book up at a bookstore in Lincoln, Nebraska," he said in the interview.

Steve Jobs

David Paul Morris—Bloomberg/Getty Images

Autobiography of a Yogi, Paramahansa Yogananda

Jobs’ travails in Buddhist thought and meditation is well-worn territory: The Apple founder’s 1970s spiritual pilgrimage to India is a crucial part of the company’s origin story.

After Jobs died in 2011, Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff said friends and family were given a copy of “Autobiography of a Yogi,” written by the Indian guru credited with introducing westerners to meditation, at a memorial service Jobs had planned himself.

"I said, 'This is going to be good,' Benioff said at a 2013 conference."I knew this was a decision he made that everyone was going to get this. So whatever this was, it was the last thing he wanted us all to think about."

Marc Benioff

Simon Dawson/Bloomberg via Getty Images

The Art of War, Sun Tzu

Benioff, for his part, credits The Art of War, Sun Tzu’s famous military treatise, as the book that's been most instrumental to his own career. Benioff even wrote the foreword to its 2008 reprint:

“Since I first read The Art of War more than a dozen years ago, I have applied its concepts to many areas of my life,” he writes. “The tenets of the book provided me the concept to enter an industry dominated by much bigger players--and gave us the strategies to render them powerless. Ultimately, it is how took on the entire software industry.”

We’ve included affiliate links in this article. Click here to learn what those are.

Correction: An earlier version of this article misspelled Carol Bartz's last name.

Previous article 20 Best Success Books Everyone...
Next article Why Reading Business Books May...

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here