First, Break All The Rules by Marcus Buckingham book cover

First, Break All The Rules

by Marcus Buckingham · 1999

Gallup's research on what great managers actually do, and it's not what you'd think.

Worth reading? Buckingham's First, Break All the Rules flips conventional management: great managers don't fix weaknesses, they capitalize on strengths and define outcomes, not steps. Based on hard Gallup data, so it's credible. Skip it if you have no team.

AuthorMarcus Buckingham
Published1999
CategoryBusiness & Money
Favorite quote“People don't change that much.”

ISBN: 9781595621115ISBN10: 1595621113ASIN: 1595621113

The Verdict

Buckingham’s First, Break All the Rules flips conventional management: great managers don’t fix weaknesses, they capitalize on strengths and define outcomes, not steps. Based on hard Gallup data, so it’s credible. Skip it if you have no team.

Read it if

managers who want evidence-based people leadership, not theory

First, Break All The Rules by Marcus Buckingham: book review and summary

Book Summary

Gallup's research on what great managers actually do, and it's not what you'd think. It earns its place by giving you a clear lens you can apply, not just inspiration. Great managers select for talent, then develop it. Don't try to fix weaknesses; manage around them. The practical move is to read it once, then act on the one idea that maps to your current bottleneck, rereading the whole thing rarely adds more than executing the part you skipped.

Top 5 Lessons from First, Break All The Rules

  1. Great managers select for talent, then develop it.
  2. Don't try to fix weaknesses; manage around them.
  3. Define the right outcomes, not the right steps.
  4. Focus on strengths, not symmetry of skill.
  5. People leave managers, not companies.

Top 2 Quotes from First, Break All The Rules

"People don't change that much."

Marcus Buckingham, First, Break All The Rules

"The best managers break the rules."

Marcus Buckingham, First, Break All The Rules

Frequently Asked Questions

Is First, Break All The Rules worth reading?

Yes, if the description fits you, managers who want evidence-based people leadership, not theory. Skip it if you're an individual contributor with no reports.

What is the main idea of First, Break All The Rules?

Buckingham's First, Break All the Rules flips conventional management: great managers don't fix weaknesses, they capitalize on strengths and define outcomes, not steps.

Who should read First, Break All The Rules?

Managers who want evidence-based people leadership, not theory. Skip it if you're an individual contributor with no reports.

What will you get out of First, Break All The Rules?

A clearer, opinionated take you can act on, plus the sharpest lessons pulled into a short list so you don't have to read the whole book to decide.