The Book in Three Sentences
The 10X Rule says that 1) you should set targets for yourself that are 10X greater than what you believe you can achieve and 2) you should take actions that are 10X greater than what you believe are necessary to achieve your goals. The biggest mistake most people make in life is not setting goals high enough. Taking massive action is the only way to fulfill your true potential.
The 10X Rule Summary
This is my book summary of The 10X Rule by Grant Cardone. My notes are informal and often contain quotes from the book as well as my own thoughts. This summary also includes key lessons and important passages from the book.
- The biggest mistake most people make in life is not setting goals high enough.
- The 10X Rule is based on understanding the level of effort and the level of thinking required to succeed.
- Operating at activity levels far beyond the normal is 10X action and execution. It will take you far.
- Set targets that are 10X the goals you would ever dream of.
- Your thoughts and actions are the reason you are where you are right now.
- In order to go farther than you ever thought possible you must both think and act at levels 10X beyond the norm.
- Why keep working once you have achieved a certain financial level of success? Because you can be happy while accomplishing things, not while resting and doing nothing. If you loved your wife and kids yesterday, should you just stop at that? Or should you build upon it? Same way with your work and legacy.
- Limiting the amount of success you desire is a violation of the 10X Rule.
- The 10X Rule: You must set targets for yourself that are 10X more than what you think you want and then take 10X the action you think is required to get there.
- Common mistake 1: setting your sights too low.
- Common mistake 2: underestimating how much action is required.
- Common mistake 3: spending too much time competing and not enough time dominating their sector.
- Common mistake 4: underestimating the amount of adversity they will have to overcome.
- Any goal you set is going to be difficult to achieve, so why not set them higher from the beginning?
- Most people feel like they are working – rather than chasing passion – because the payoff isn’t large enough.
- You will either work to accomplish your goals and dreams or you’ll be used to accomplish someone else’s goals and dreams.
- Never reduce a target. Do not explain away failure. Always increase your actions.
- Nobody wins when you diminish the importance of success.
- People will say, “success isn’t everything.” No shit. Of course success isn’t everything. But it is important. And diminishing that importance with saying like “success isn’t everything” gives you an excuse to limit your vision of success for yourself and the actions you take.
- It is your duty to be successful. Do not view success as an option.
- Being dependent on only one person or one solution for success is your fault. Winners bring in success from many different avenues.
- Politicians make all these promises, but your success (or your children’s success) is not dependent on politics. Whether one person gets voted in or not does not determine if you will win. As long as the system provides the opportunity to succeed, no one individual, politics, or president will dictate your success – except you.
- Success by others is an indication that something is possible. It should inspire you.
- Those who use blame as a reason for not achieving success will never be successful. Victim thinking doesn’t benefit you.
- If you’re willing to take credit when you win then you have to be willing to take responsibility when you lose.
- Even when bad luck or random events strike there is always something you can do to be better prepared next time.
- If you were really legit, people would come to you. Stop driving and flying to everyone. Step up your game.
- If people comment on your level of action, then you’re doing something right.
- The biggest business problem is obscurity.
- Money and power follow attention.
- Rid yourself of average thinking and average action.
- Failing to think big in the beginning will lead to failing to act big.
- Set your goals 10X bigger than you think they should be.
- Top achievers don’t copy or compete. They dominate. They set the pace.
- How can you get an unfair advantage?
- Never play by the agreed upon norms of your industry. Create new ways to dominate your sector.
- You don’t have to be the first to do something, but you should be the best at it.
- Create “only” practices. What is something only you are doing?
- You have to be obsessed. Nobody has ever accomplished something incredible without obsession.
- The ability to be obsessed is not a disease. It is a gift.
- What goal would cause you to be obsessed?
- The saying “under commit and over deliver” is stupid. Instead, over commit and figure out how to show up at a higher level.
- Don’t follow the pack. Lead the pack.
- Interesting trend: when people and businesses cut spending and focus on saving, they almost always save their energy, effort, and creativity as well. It is as if the mindset of dialing down spending naturally dials down activity in other areas.
- Success is like a garden. You must constantly tend to it and care for it.
- Most people never get close to being overexposed. Nearly everyone is hindered by obscurity.
- Last minute preparation is just a way to delay and be fearful. Focus on training better beforehand and when the resistance comes face it and take action.
- Fear is a signal to do what you fear right now. Do not feed fear by waiting and letting it build.
- Don’t worry about time management or balance. Instead, focus on abundance. Don’t think either/or. Instead, think all/everything.
- Time management is more about knowing your priorities clearly than finding balance.
- When the author had his first child, he and his wife created a time schedule for his daughter’s sleep that allowed him to spend an hour with her each morning, maintain the same work calendar. The bonus was the daughter was asleep by 7pm, which meant uninterrupted spouse time.
- Nobody will save you or make you successful.
- Weak and overwhelmed individuals resort to criticism.
- Customer satisfaction is not nearly as big of a problem as “non-customer satisfaction.” People not knowing you exist and not buying your product is the real issue.
- Create an exit survey for non-buyers. (Anyone who leaves sales page?)
- Customer acquisition is the primary objective, not customer satisfaction.
- Customer complaints are not to be avoided. They are problems you can solve.
- Powerful companies and brands are omnipresent. You need to be everywhere.
- The best revenge against your critics is massive success.
- Duplicate the thoughts and actions of successful people and you too will become successful.
- Approach everything with the attitude that it can be done. Believe that you will figure it out.
- Losing money or a business never dominated your ability to take action.
- The author told his whole staff they needed to make 50 sales calls. Then he told them they needed to make the calls in 30 minutes. He went and made 28 calls in 22 minutes. The point is to stop analyzing and paralyzing yourself with overthinking. Just act.
- Challenge traditions and established ways of thinking.
- Don’t worry about how much work it is. Think about how great the results will be.
- Commit first. Figure out the details later.
- Reach up in your relationships. Find people better than you.
- Taking massive actions is the only way to fulfill your true potential.