34 pages • 1 hour read
Simon SinekA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
In this part, Sinek provides historical context for the Baby Boomer generation and how the prevalent ideologies of this generation came to be in the first place. After the end of World War II, the American population increased by 76 million people. The children born during this time grew up surrounded by the notions of American exceptionalism and American prosperity, yet in many ways skeptical of the government (post-Vietnam War and the Watergate scandal). This skepticism produced a sense of hyperindividualism, which yielded the mentality of “me first” both in the workplace and in people’s personal lives. Boomers became influential leaders, founding and leading companies with this sense of individualism. The righteousness of serving others was replaced with protecting one’s own right to affluence.
Sinek points to a pivotal moment in 1981 when President Reagan fired 11,000 air traffic controllers in a single day. This behavior not only encouraged but started to normalize downsizing in the face of so-called underperformance.
The prioritizing of profit divided leaders and employees. With few exceptions, leaders and leadership as a practice lacked empathy; nurturing a positive work culture became secondary to a company’s profitability. Employees often had to compete against each other, hoping to prove their value within companies to avoid being let go.
In this section, Sinek emphasizes two of the book’s main themes: generational intersectionality and the interplay between profit and well-being. By highlighting the Boomer generation, he connects some of their toxic habits (i.e., perpetuating success stories based on “working hard” regardless of circumstances) that shaped said generation to those rife in the modern workplace. As the Boomer generation begins to pass the baton, generational dissonance becomes more apparent: “The big Boomer generation has, by accident, created a world quite out of balance. [...] our leaders may not have the confidence or patience to do what needs to be done” (118).
Sinek highlights the interplay between profit and well-being by lamenting the 1981 mass layoffs, endorsed and even praised by President Ronald Reagan. When the leader of a nation essentially congratulates a company’s ability to survive by resorting to such measures, the nation itself is exposed. While Reagan was simply a symbolic figure in this incident, Sinek believes that this particular moment was a concrete turning point for corporations and our value system.
By Simon Sinek