Smart People Should Build Things

How to Restore Our Culture of Achievement, Build a Path for Entrepreneurs, and Create New Jobs in America

Andrew Yang

Recommended By

Book Synopsis

"Smart People Should Build Things" by Andrew Yang offers a compelling account of the current career landscape, challenging the conventional wisdom of pursuing traditional paths. Yang's insightful analysis highlights the importance of fostering entrepreneurship and empowering individuals to create meaningful work.

Providing a refreshing perspective on the educational system, Yang argues that top graduates from prestigious institutions should consider building businesses rather than joining corporate firms. Through engaging anecdotes and real-life examples, he reveals the immense value of creating innovative solutions for social problems, ultimately leading to personal fulfillment and economic growth.

With a keen focus on revitalizing struggling economies, Yang proposes a framework for fostering entrepreneurship and encouraging investment in small, local businesses. By bridging the gap between academia and the world of startups, he advocates for creating more pathways to success for talented individuals who possess the ambition and ideas necessary to build impactful ventures.

Addressing the challenges faced by communities affected by economic decline, Yang examines the concepts of "brain drain" and the loss of talent and resources. He presents tangible strategies for reversing these trends, emphasizing the importance of attracting and retaining entrepreneurial talent in order to jumpstart economic revitalization.

"Smart People Should Build Things" serves as a rallying call for individuals who seek to make a tangible difference in society. By encouraging more graduates to think entrepreneurially and channel their skills into building businesses, Yang envisions a future where innovation thrives, creating job opportunities and fostering sustainable and inclusive economic growth.

In this thought-provoking and actionable book, Andrew Yang provides a roadmap for shaping a society that values entrepreneurship and empowers individuals to build the future they envision. "Smart People Should Build Things" challenges readers to question conventional career paths and embrace the transformative power of entrepreneurship in driving social and economic progress.

Explore More Books

See All
Euclid's Elements
The Case Against Sugar
Fables
Flowers for Algernon
For The Love Of Physics
The Humane Economy
Memoirs
The Great Mental Models
Think and Grow Rich
History Has Begun
The Story of Civilization: Rousseau and Revolution
The Social Animal
The Worlds I See
Mismatch
The E-Myth Revisited
Citizen Coke
Last Chance to See
The World Without Us
A Confederacy of Dunces
It's Not How Good You Are - It's How Good You Want To Be
Pre-Suasion
The Art of Stillness
What We Owe the Future
Maverick
Letters to a Young Poet
You
Black Box Thinking
Being Nixon
The Black Book of Communism
In Patagonia
Deep Learning
Economics in One Lesson
Monetizing Innovation
Deep Learning
The Dream of Reason
Why Minsky Matters
Everything All At Once
Gay Like Me
Benjamin Franklin
Why Information Grows
The Sympathizer
Home Game
Dancing In The Glory Of Monsters
Go To
The Water Dancer
The Myth of the Strong Leader
Where Do School Funds Go?
So Good They Can't Ignore You
One Hundred Years of Solitude
Best Evidence
The Spy Who Came In From The Cold
Gang Leader for a Day
Gridiron Genius
T
Who Am I
Shook One
Letters of Note
Algorithms to Live By
The Psychology of Money
The Quest for El Cid
This Explains Everything
Spain in Our Hearts
Night Sky with Exit Wounds
Apollo's Arrow
Bitcoin
Love Yourself Like Your Life Depends On It
The Great Revolt
Unstoppable Prosperity
A Pattern Language
Red Star Over The Pacific
Collected Fictions
The Book of Laughter and Forgetting
Life After Power
Who Is Michael Ovitz
On Immunity
An Astronaut's Guide to Life on Earth
Let Your Life Speak
The End of Power
Secrets of Closing the Sale
Lincoln In The Bardo
Chaos
Well
How to Teach Your Baby Math
Dead Wake
What Technology Wants
A Universe From Nothing
Fall of Constantinople
Simple Rules
The New Jim Crow
A Very Expensive Poison
Never Eat Alone
Hold 'em Poker
Born To Run
Devouring Freedom
Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea
The War of Art
René Girard's Mimetic Theory
Radical Son
How To Be a No Limit Person
On Drugs