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15 Books Every Entrepreneur Should Read

The most recommended books for founders, ranked by how many entrepreneurs and investors independently cited them on GurusReads.

By GurusReads Editorial··7 min read
15 Books Every Entrepreneur Should Read

There is no shortage of "books every entrepreneur should read" lists. The problem with most of them: they're written by journalists or bloggers who haven't built companies. The recommendations feel generic because they are.

This list is different. Every book here was independently recommended by multiple founders, investors, or operators — people who've actually started, funded, or scaled companies — in publicly verifiable sources tracked on GurusReads. We ranked them by total independent recommendation count.

How We Chose These Books

GurusReads tracks book recommendations from verified public sources: podcast interviews, published essays, YouTube appearances, social media posts. Every recommendation on our platform links to the original source. The books below appear most frequently across our network of founders and investors.


The Books

1. Zero to One — Peter Thiel

Zero to One Cover

The contrarian's manifesto for startups. Thiel's thesis: competition is for losers. Real value comes from creating something new — going from 0 to 1 — not copying what already exists.

His framework for monopoly vs. commodity businesses has become foundational vocabulary for anyone in tech. Chapters on secrets ("what important truth do very few people agree with you on?") and the power law of startup investing are required reading.

Key insight: Every great business is built on a secret — something true that most people don't believe yet.

Recommended by:
Elon MuskMark ZuckerbergSam AltmanTim FerrissNassim TalebMarc AndreessenEric WeinsteinChris DixonBen HorowitzLuis von Ahn


2. The Hard Thing About Hard Things — Ben Horowitz

The Hard Thing About Hard Things Cover

Already on the leadership list, it belongs here too. Horowitz writes about the loneliness of founding — the weight of decisions no one has a framework for. Required reading before you start a company, not after you're in the middle of one.

Recommended by:
Mark ZuckerbergTim FerrissMarc AndreessenPeter AttiaDustin MoskovitzFred WilsonBlake SchollKeith RaboisDrew HoustonKathryn Minshew


3. Shoe Dog — Phil Knight

Shoe Dog Cover

The best founder memoir ever written. Nike's origin story told with brutal honesty — the near-bankruptcy moments, the manufacturing disasters, the almost-lost bank credit. Knight doesn't pretend it was a plan; it was a series of desperate improvisations that happened to work.

What makes it useful: Knight shows that every successful company has moments where it should have died. The survivorship bias of startup success hides how close to the edge everyone actually runs.

Key insight: Persistence in the face of near-certain failure is not inspiring in the moment. It's just what building something requires.

Recommended by:
Bill GatesWarren BuffettAusten AllredBen ThompsonBill GurleyBlake RandallBrian ArmstrongAlexis OhanianKathryn MinshewPatrick O'Shaughnessy


4. The Lean Startup — Eric Ries

The Lean Startup Cover

The book that introduced Build-Measure-Learn to the startup vocabulary. Ries's core argument: startups fail not because they can't execute, but because they execute the wrong thing. The MVP framework and pivot/persevere decision process have become standard operating procedure for product teams.

Recommended by:
Bill GatesMark CubanMarc AndreessenDustin MoskovitzJason CalacanisKevin SystromMarty CaganPatrick Bet-DavidRaoul PalSheryl Sandberg


5. Thinking, Fast and Slow — Daniel Kahneman

Thinking Fast and Slow Cover

Every founder is in the business of making decisions under uncertainty. Kahneman's framework — System 1 (fast, intuitive, error-prone) vs. System 2 (slow, deliberate, rational) — gives you a vocabulary for diagnosing why your thinking goes wrong.

Cognitive biases covered include: anchoring, availability heuristic, planning fallacy, and overconfidence. Every one of these kills startups.

Recommended by:
Bill GatesSam AltmanRay DalioTim FerrissNaval RavikantNassim TalebMarc AndreessenMark MansonMichiko KakutaniPreston Pysh


6. The Innovator's Dilemma — Clayton Christensen

The Innovator's Dilemma Cover

Why great companies fail when new technologies emerge. Christensen's insight: it's not incompetence or laziness that causes incumbents to be disrupted — it's rational behavior at every level of the organization. They optimize for their current best customers, who don't want the disruptive product.

Recommended by:
Steve JobsMark CubanMarc AndreessenBlake SchollCaterina FakeChris DixonDrew HoustonEv WilliamsGuy KawasakiJeff Bezos


7. Good to Great — Jim Collins

Good to Great Cover

Collins's 5-year research project identified what separates companies that made a sustained leap to greatness from competitors that didn't. Key concepts: Level 5 Leadership, the Hedgehog Concept, and the Flywheel.

Recommended by:
Brian ArmstrongDaniel EkDave RamseyEv WilliamsFrank BlakeJason CalacanisJeff BezosJohn DoerrMax LevchinMichael Hyatt


8. The E-Myth Revisited — Michael Gerber

The E-Myth Revisited Cover

Most small businesses fail because the founder is technically skilled at the work but has no framework for building a business around the work. Gerber's distinction between the Technician, Manager, and Entrepreneur mindsets is the most useful framework for early-stage founders.

Recommended by:
Tim FerrissDave CamarilloDave RamseyDerek SiversMichael SartainPatrick Bet-DavidTom BilyeuMichael Hyatt


9. Crossing the Chasm — Geoffrey Moore

Crossing the Chasm Cover

The technology adoption lifecycle and the chasm between Early Adopters and the Early Majority is the most accurate map of why many technically successful startups plateau. Moore's "bowling pin" targeting strategy — win one niche completely before expanding — has influenced go-to-market thinking across the industry.

Recommended by:
Seth GodinAndrew NgBill GurleyChangpeng ZhaoChris DixonAaron LevieEv WilliamsGuy KawasakiRon ConwayDrew Houston


10. High Growth Handbook — Elad Gil

High Growth Handbook Cover

The operational companion to Zero to One. Gil covers the execution layer: how to hire executives, structure the board, navigate acquisitions, and scale culture. Interviews with founders and operators including Marc Andreessen, Patrick Collison, and Sam Altman make it the most practically dense handbook available.

Recommended by:
Aaron LevieAlexis OhanianBrian ArmstrongChris DixonKathryn MinshewKeith RaboisMax LevchinReid HoffmanRyan Petersen


11. Principles — Ray Dalio

Principles Cover

Dalio's framework for systematic decision-making, built from 40 years of running Bridgewater. The first section — his personal principles — is the most useful for founders: radical transparency, pain + reflection = progress, and believing one's weaknesses more than one's strengths.

Recommended by:
Bill GatesLex FridmanMark CubanTim FerrissNaval RavikantArianna HuffingtonPhil JacksonCaterina FakeBryan JohnsonMark Manson


12. The Mom Test — Rob Fitzpatrick

The Mom Test Cover

The shortest and most underrated book on this list. Fitzpatrick's thesis: customer interviews almost always mislead you because people are polite. His framework — ask only about people's past behavior, never about hypothetical future intent — is the most reliable way to validate whether you're building something people actually want.


13. Founders at Work — Jessica Livingston

Founders at Work Cover

Oral history of early-stage startups: Apple, Flickr, Gmail, PayPal, Hotmail. The value is seeing how improvised and uncertain every successful origin story actually was.

Recommended by:
Ryan HolidayPaul GrahamAlexis OhanianEv WilliamsRon Conway


14. Influence — Robert Cialdini

Influence Cover

Six principles of persuasion — reciprocity, commitment, social proof, authority, liking, scarcity — with research backing and real-world examples.

Recommended by:
Warren BuffettCharlie MungerNaval RavikantPaul GrahamJames ClearMark MansonAndrew WilkinsonNeil StraussGuy KawasakiMichael Hyatt


15. Poor Charlie's Almanack — Charlie Munger

Poor Charlie's Almanack Cover

Munger's collected speeches and mental models. The "lattice of mental models" concept — that good thinking requires mental models drawn from multiple disciplines.

Recommended by:
Bill GatesWarren BuffettTim FerrissNaval RavikantMarc AndreessenDrew HoustonJohn CollisonCourtland AllenPatrick CollisonRamit Sethi


Where to Start

First book: The Hard Thing About Hard Things — read it before you're in the middle of those hard things.

For product/validation: The Mom TestThe Lean StartupCrossing the Chasm

For thinking: Thinking, Fast and SlowPoor Charlie's AlmanackZero to One

For execution: High Growth HandbookHigh Output ManagementGood to Great

Explore who recommends each of these books — and their full reading lists — on GurusReads.

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See who recommends these books

GurusReads tracks verified book recommendations from hundreds of founders, investors, and thought leaders. Explore their full reading lists.