Grant Cardone’s “The 10x Rule” Reviewed

As I’ve mentioned many times, Reading and continuing education are very important to me.

I went through a little drought where I wasn’t having much luck finding good books to read/listen to. This is pitiful in the scheme of things, because there are millions of books out there, but I grabbed a few duds and that slowed me down a bit.

I can’t say that the 10x rule ever came up on my top 10 list, but Audible was running a special with a bunch of buy-one-get-one books, and Grant Cardone’s 10x rule made the cut.

I had already read “If your not first your last”, so I was familiar with Grant Cardone. I’m not a salesman, and he is a Sales training guy, so that set me back at first, but I decided to give it a shot. After all, the “only difference between success and failure is the 10x rule!” yeah!

The book set me back initially because I knew it was a typically over-hyped semi-sales pitch to build the brand of Grant Cardone himself. Some books are awfully aggressive, ego-boosting the author the entire time. While Grant uses personal examples in the book, I won’t quite say it was a rolling advertisement. I didn’t feel offended or over-sold to.

This book is one of those books that I don’t think I “Learned” anything from. I don’t want to suggest there wasn’t valuable ideas, but there wasn’t anything “new” or “Novel”. Thats OK though, because the book was very much a pep rally, jazzing you up about doing stuff.

This is, in many circumstances, invaluable. From my experience, the reason 99% of people fail is because they don’t get off their rear end and DO SOMETHING. The 10x rule premise is precisely that- anything worth doing is 10x bigger and takes 10x longer to see success. It reminds you that its essential that you get busy being productive, and that you stop using the excuses of those around you why you shouldn’t. This is, while not novel, a very important lesson that I feel is grossly under-recognized. I give Grant some serious credit for knocking that into your head over and over again to the point that reading the book for 15 minutes makes you want to put the book down so you can go make things happen. I don’t think its possible to read the book and not increase your productivity simply because of its ability to get you excited about it.

I truly respect and appreciate Grant’s argument that being all you can be is actually a duty, and that being lazy is bad for you, your family, and our society. I firmly agree. Just imagine how great it would be if everyone took Grant’s advice!

Grant walks you through taking the “fourth degree” of action, which is MASSIVE action. No one sees tremendous success by doing what everyone else is doing, you have to do massive action- more than anyone else is willing to do. Grant also talks about the idea that time management is a myth, and while I used to look for the elusive “Time management”, I have come to the conclusion that Grant Cardone’s perspective is indeed correct. So stop behaving like everyone else and go be successful already!

In a nutshell, I can’t say that this was a revolutionary book. I don’t know if I’d run out and recommend it, unless you need to get off your rear end and make things happen. For everyone else its positive reinforcement on what you already know. Sure, if you are looking for a book to read its a fine option. I would never turn someone away from it, but its not going to be making my top 25 list anytime soon!