
How to Win Friends and Influence People
by Dale Carnegie
Editorial review
An almost century-old book that still outsells most of its modern imitators. Carnegie's principles — 'become genuinely interested in other people,' 'remember names,' 'admit when you're wrong' — sound obvious until you notice how rarely you actually do them.
AI-generated summary
Carnegie compiles thirty principles for getting along with people, gathered from his years teaching public speaking and adult education. Each principle is illustrated with stories from history, business, and his own students.
Key takeaways
- 1
People are most interested in themselves; lead with curiosity, not pitch.
- 2
Criticism rarely changes behavior; it usually entrenches it.
- 3
Names, sincere appreciation, and honest interest are the cheapest leverage in social life.
- 4
Letting the other person feel the idea is theirs is more effective than insisting it is yours.
The right reader
Anyone in any role that involves other people. Especially valuable for engineers, founders, and quietly skilled people who haven't formally studied social skills.
What it touches
How it reads
Plainspoken, friendly, evergreen.
Reading difficulty: Accessible
