“Make No Small Plans” is a game-changing book that’ll light a fire under you. It’s packed with powerful lessons on thinking big, chasing dreams, and building community. The authors’ journey from college buddies to successful entrepreneurs will inspire you to reach for the stars.
Ready to transform your life? Dive into this review and discover how to turn your wildest dreams into reality.
Table of Contents
- Genres
- Review
- Introduction: Insights into the Summit story.
- Passion sees you over the line when the going gets tough.
- Follow your authentic interests but hedge your bets.
- Question existing ways of doing things and you might just hit upon a great idea.
- If you want to build something memorable, keep it surreal.
- Keep an open mind and you might just win big.
- Final Summary
- About the author
- Table of Contents
Genres
Self-help, Business, Entrepreneurship, Motivation, Personal Development, Leadership, Success, Networking, Community Building, Inspirational, Career Success, Religion, Spirituality, Personal Success, Motivational Growth, Women’s Personal Spiritual Growth
“Make No Small Plans” chronicles the journey of five friends who founded Summit, a global community of entrepreneurs and innovators. The book delves into their experiences, from hosting small gatherings to organizing large-scale events and even purchasing a mountain. It offers valuable insights on goal-setting, perseverance, and the power of community.
The authors share personal anecdotes and lessons learned, emphasizing the importance of thinking big and taking risks. They discuss strategies for overcoming obstacles, building meaningful relationships, and creating lasting impact. The book also explores the concept of “collective intelligence” and how collaboration can lead to extraordinary achievements.
Key takeaways include:
- Dream big and set ambitious goals
- Embrace failure as a learning opportunity
- Surround yourself with inspiring people
- Create value for others
- Stay true to your vision
- Balance passion with practicality
- Cultivate a growth mindset
- Build authentic relationships
- Leverage the power of community
- Make a positive impact on the world
Review
“Make No Small Plans” is a refreshing take on entrepreneurship and personal growth. The authors’ candid storytelling and practical advice make for an engaging read. Their journey from college students to successful entrepreneurs is both inspiring and relatable.
The book’s strength lies in its emphasis on community-building and collaboration. It offers a unique perspective on success, highlighting the importance of relationships and shared experiences. The authors’ insights on networking and creating meaningful connections are particularly valuable.
However, some readers might find the book’s focus on large-scale events and high-profile individuals a bit intimidating. The authors could have included more examples of how their principles can be applied to smaller-scale ventures or everyday life.
The writing style is accessible and engaging, with a good balance of personal anecdotes and actionable advice. The book’s structure, divided into different stages of the authors’ journey, makes it easy to follow and digest.
Overall, “Make No Small Plans” is a worthwhile read for aspiring entrepreneurs, leaders, and anyone looking to make a significant impact. It challenges readers to think beyond their limitations and provides practical strategies for turning ambitious dreams into reality. While it may not offer groundbreaking new concepts, its fresh perspective and real-world examples make it a valuable addition to the self-help and business genre.
Introduction: Insights into the Summit story.
Make No Small Plans (2022) is the inside story of how a group of young entrepreneurs created one of the world’s most exciting platforms for global events and conferences – the Summit Series. This isn’t just a chance for them to recount their company’s history, though. Packed with actionable takeaways and business wisdom, this is a book designed to inspire readers on their own entrepreneurial journeys.
If you’ve been following modern entrepreneurship, tech, and business culture, you’ve probably heard of Summit.
Summit started with an idea: great things happen when you bring people together and get them talking. That’s not a new idea – it’s why global movers and shakers head to places like Davos and Aspen, after all.
But the guests at those kinds of events are typically already established. They’re presidents and Pulitzer prize winners or the CEOs and CFOs of giant corporations.
What about the next generation, though – the people building the apps and start-ups set to revolutionize tomorrow’s world? What if you brought them together and got them talking?
In 2008, four 20-something entrepreneurs with little hands-on experience and just two college degrees between them decided to find out. Their book, Make No Small Plans, is the story of what happened next.
The short version is that they built Summit, an event company that has become known as a kind of Davos for young entrepreneurs and a hothouse for up-and-coming talent.
Summit’s first iteration, a ski trip in Utah, was a far cry from the kind of events it hosts today. Back then, there were just 19 guests in a poky rented house with shared bedrooms. The beer ran out within half an hour and the shoestring budget barely covered the skiing equipment. But it didn’t matter.
Once those guests got to talking, sparks started flying. They traded ideas, hatched deals, and made plans for the future. Most importantly, they forged lifelong friendships.
After Utah, Summit snowballed. Today, it hosts events all over the world and its list of guest speakers includes the likes of Jeff Bezos, Richard Branson, Al Gore, and many other recognizable names. The scale of the Summit operation may have changed, but the company’s values remain the same. As the founders’ manifesto puts it, “We believe that the more great people you meet, the more great people you will meet.”
In this summary, we’re going to learn about the story and spirit of Summit. We’re not going to try to tell you the long version – that’s best left to the authors of Make No Small Plans. Instead, we’ll be zooming in and focusing on five snapshots that capture the philosophy, ideas, and values of these remarkable entrepreneurs.
Along the way, you’ll also learn
- why no idea should go unspoken;
- how to build meaningful business relationships; and
- why it pays to keep things surreal.
Passion sees you over the line when the going gets tough.
People say, do something you love and you’ll never work a day in your life. It’s an idea that’s been knocking around so long it’s virtually become conventional wisdom.
Thing is, though, it’s not quite right.
The thinking here is that the things you care about – call them passions, or hobbies – are easy because you want to do them. Work, by contrast, is a chore. A slog. Something you have to do which you’d rather not. Time flies when you’re having fun but the office clock turns unbearably slowly. If doing something you loved also earned you money, it follows, it wouldn’t really be work.
But there’s another way of looking at things. The thing about passion projects is that they make you want to keep going deeper. You keep discovering more complexity. More room for improvement. You also become more critical and more attuned to shortcomings. In short, they turn you into a perfectionist.
It’s the same whatever the activity. Tennis. Playing the guitar. Writing code. You want to get better, but improvement is painful. Playing scales a thousand times sucks. Spending hours practicing your backhand is a chore. Building the 100th basic website is boring.
But you persevere. Put in the hard yards. Complete the drills. It’s precisely because you care that you’re capable of doing the work. Put differently, if you do something you love, you’ll work every single day of your life. And that’s a good thing! Because you’ll be doing something that matters. That expresses your values. That moves you toward your authentic goals.
It’s not a question of work versus passion, then – that’s a false dichotomy. It’s care and interest. If you care, you’ll do the work; if it connects with who you are, if it interests you, the hard and boring parts of the process mean something. That’s what sees you through. That’s what keeps you pushing.
This idea isn’t neatly packaged in Make No Small Plans – it isn’t given a chapter or section of its own. But it shines through on every page and in every story the authors tell. Of course, on its own, that caring isn’t enough for success – there’s so much more that goes into something as complex and big as building a global company. But it’s absolutely foundational. Everything else gets built on top of this commitment.
Follow your authentic interests but hedge your bets.
Let’s rewind to 2008. The economy is crashing and the future is uncertain. Elliott, one of Summit’s founders, is in college. He’s not happy, though. Something is missing.
One day, while walking to campus, he finds himself caught up in a large crowd of students. Everyone is streaming in the same direction, toward the library, to read the same textbooks and study the same problems. Problems last year’s students solved. All so they can compete for the same jobs in the same labor market that’s being wrecked by the greatest recession since the ’30s. For Elliott, it doesn’t add up.
He doesn’t want to do that. He wants to work on his own problems, not his professors’. He doesn’t want to study – he wants to build something. In short, he’s just discovered something important about himself: a sense of where his authentic interests lie and what he wants to do with his life.
The word authenticity can sound like a big and intimidating, existential kind of thing. That’s because we often think of it in all-or-nothing terms: being authentic or being inauthentic. But you don’t have to go all in right away. Take it from Elliott.
He’s realized he wants to set and solve his own problems. To work for himself. To be an entrepreneur. His first thought? Take the plunge. Quit college.
His dad, luckily, is a sensible guy. Down to earth. Practical. Here’s what he says. There are risks, and then there are risks. The question to think about is how far you can fall. Dropping out of college and spending all your savings is very risky. If things don’t pan out, you’ll be in a tough situation that’s hard to get out of. So what if you spend some of your savings and stay in college while working on what you really care about? If it doesn’t work out, you’ll have a bruised ego but you’ll still have options and half your savings. Same reward, different risks. Simply put, don’t put all your eggs in one basket.
What was Elliott’s response? He listened. He didn’t drop out of college. He started selling ads in an online newsletter in his spare time. He didn’t spend all his savings. And he didn’t try to persuade his family to remortgage the house to support his business idea. And that, too, is part of the Summit story. It was the cold calls he placed from his college dorm room that taught him the skills he’d need to launch the company.
So here’s the lesson: acting authentically doesn’t mean being reckless. You’re not charging headlong into the unknown – you’re slowly pushing open doors to new opportunities.
That process begins with a single question: What am I interested in? Sometimes, the answer will present itself serendipitously – it just hits you one day, like it did Elliott. But you can also be more deliberate about it. Sit with that question a while and then write your answers down. Maybe it’s cooking, or fitness, or finance, or learning a language. And then? Well, you make time to do those things. You start cooking. Take that class. Get that certificate. Enroll in that course.
So many big journeys start with this shift from a passive wish to active engagement. But remember: it’s not all or nothing. Don’t make small plans, but do start small!
Question existing ways of doing things and you might just hit upon a great idea.
Entrepreneurship isn’t glamorous – especially when you’re cold calling prospective clients from your childhood bedroom. Most of all, it can be lonely.
There were tons of other young entrepreneurs out there, but Summit’s future founders found it hard to connect with them. Back in the late 2000s, the only real bet was to attend networking events.
These events were brutal, though. For a couple of hours, you’d be crammed into the brightly lit lobby of a downtown hotel with hundreds of people desperate to seize this opportunity to make connections. It was loud. It was stuffy. It was chaotic. It wasn’t a get-together. It was a cattle market.
It wasn’t just that there wasn’t time or space for interesting conversations, though. These events seemed to actively encourage soul-crushing interactions. It was an environment designed for that guy who’s always selling something; who’s always pushing his agenda. The guy who’s already surveying the room for his next target while failing to listen to the person in front of him. Who treats others as means to his ends.
Everything was transactional and rooted in short-term thinking. It was about what you can do for me right now, or tomorrow, or next week. But the best networkers are the kind of people who build long-term relationships with people they care about. They understand that relationships need to be nurtured – you have to put work and practice and time into them before they bear fruit.
For the Summit founders, this way of looking at things seemed intuitive – even obvious. But that posed an interesting question. If the secret to building great business relationships was hardly a mystery, why wasn’t there some kind of forum that encouraged that behavior? A space in which better, deeper, more interesting conversations could be held? A place in which entrepreneurs could actually meet each other?
It was that question which launched Summit Series.
The timing was right, too. The first buds of the new digital economy were sprouting from the rubble left behind by the crash of 2008. With the app store, you could build anything. New brands were springing up and reimagining the way everything was sold, from mattresses to shoes to vacuum cleaners.
But all these entrepreneurs were like individual islands. Together, they formed a kind of archipelago, but there was no bridge connecting them. And that’s where Summit came in.
Here was the idea: bring as many of these entrepreneurs as possible together in one place and get them talking. Not just for a few hours. And not in a stuffy hotel lobby. Somewhere nice. Someplace where real conversations could unfold. And that’s how it started. Elliott booked a house near Utah’s ski slopes and started cold-calling potential sponsors and interesting young entrepreneurs he’d read about. In the end, 19 people agreed to come on an all-expenses three-day ski trip.
It was the start of something big. And it all started by questioning the status quo.
If you want to build something memorable, keep it surreal.
Okay, so we’ve talked a bit about following your passions, balancing your authenticity with good sense, and starting small, being brave enough to break tradition and do things your way . . . what’s next?
For Summit’s founders, whether they’re hosting an event with fewer than 20 or more than 2,000 guests – certain rules always apply.
First, the guests. Who do you invite? The Summit take is that status is irrelevant – you don’t have to be wealthy or occupy a prestigious position to be an interesting person. What really matters is passion.
You start by asking: Is this person doing work they love? The second question is even simpler: Are they nice? That’s it. If someone ticks both boxes, they pass what’s known as the Airport Test – they’re someone you’d happily spend four hours with if your flight was delayed.
Those were the questions Summit’s founders asked when they organized that ski trip to Utah, and they’re the questions they still ask when they send out invites to events today.
But interesting and nice guests alone don’t make an event. There’s another factor in play.
One evening – this was around 2010 – the founders were having dinner with an eccentric chef in Los Angeles. He’d pioneered the city’s pop-up restaurant scene and was the star of its underground food movement. His stunts included organizing dinners by the side of highways, or on cliffs overlooking the ocean.
He’d heard about Summit – word had gotten around after Utah and a couple of follow-up events. Thing is, he told the founders, you’re keeping it real when what you really need to do is keep it surreal. It was his way of saying that Summit was a bit boring. That it needed to go up a gear or two.
He was right. And that brings us to that second factor – atmosphere. The staging. The environment. The table by the side of the highway that reframes your dish of tortellini. The thing that makes the event, well, surreal. Memorable. Immersive.
So what if you hired an entire cruise ship, packed it with over a thousand interesting guests, and sailed it around the Bahamas for three days? In 2011, Summit did precisely that. And suddenly everything came together. It was a unique experience with amazing people.
Think back to those stuffy, overlit hotel lobbies and then imagine the exact opposite – that’s what Summit at Sea was. There were meals cooked by young chefs. Live music on multiple decks. Intimate corners with sheepskin rugs for conversations. Meditation sessions. Conferences on everything from cryptocurrency to conflict resolution. Bars, pools, DJs. It was impossible to feel bored.
After 2011, Summit never looked back. Events became larger, more extravagant, and even more surreal. It’s a recipe that works. Tens of thousands of people have attended their events. More importantly, they’ve built lasting relationships. Take just a couple of examples. Qwiki, an iPhone video-sharing app that was sold to Yahoo for $50 million, was born at a Summit event. The $100 million wristwatch health-tracker company Basis secured its first round of major investment at another event.
Great things happen when you bring the right people together and get them talking in the right environment.
Keep an open mind and you might just win big.
So, Summit may have started with one great groundbreaking idea . . . but how can a company stand the test of time and stay innovative? Summit’s answer is that you foster a culture in which no idea goes unspoken. Let’s break that down.
Ideas are egalitarian. Interns can have great ideas and CEOs can have terrible ideas. It can go the other way too, of course. Sometimes relative inexperience and experience do matter. Point is, a great idea can come from anywhere, and the status of the person proposing it isn’t a reliable indicator of its worth.
So that’s the first marker of a culture that’s open to ideas: everyone gets a fair hearing. The second marker is that there’s an emphasis on generating lots of ideas. Put differently, it’s not just that anyone can put forward an idea – it’s that there’s an expectation that everyone will.
That’s because quantity makes quality. It’s only by getting it all out there that you get to the good stuff. If an idea isn’t right, you move on. No harm, no foul. You don’t have to commit to a bad idea just because you’ve given it a hearing, but the more bad ideas you hear the more likely you are to find the good ones.
On one level, hiring an entire cruise ship for more than a million dollars was a crazy idea. But it’s what put Summit over the top. That’s where that culture makes a difference. When you’re willing to engage with crazy-sounding ideas, you often find out that they’re actually workable.
Take another wild idea – getting Jeff Bezos to appear at a Summit event without blowing the company’s entire annual budget on speaking fees. It just doesn’t sound doable – this is one of the world’s richest and most in-demand men, after all. Okay, sure, but let’s give the idea a fair hearing.
What is a speaking fee anyway? Well, it’s a benefit – a remuneration for someone’s time and energy. But does it have to take the form of money? The more they thought about it, the less sure Summit’s founders were that it did. Elliott, for example, remembered a deal he’d struck with a limousine service years earlier. The company wanted to place ads in his newsletter, but couldn’t afford to. So they came to a different arrangement: they got the ads and Elliott got to use their limousines to drive to meetings.
There’d been similar deals with bands who’d performed at Summit events, too. But what can you offer a man who has it all? The answer was a platform.
This was 2016. Bezos had become a household name, but people didn’t really know his story. Who was he? Where had he come from? What were his values? So that’s what Summit offered him: a chance to tell that story to a live audience of 2,500 as well as the millions of people who’d later watch a recording of the interview. That, to him, was a unique benefit that was far, far more valuable than a speaker’s fee.
The moral of the story? Make big plans and give crazy ideas a hearing. You never know – they might just work out.
Final Summary
We’ve just gone through the summary to Make No Small Plans, by Elliott Bisnow, Jeff Rosenthal, Jeremy Schwartz, and Brett Leve.
So what, if nothing else, should you remember from this today?
Summit’s philosophy is that interesting things happen when interesting people get together and start talking. And that’s really at the heart of what the company does: it provides a forum for people to collaborate on big plans. And it’s also how Summit itself works. It’s the founders’ commitment to nurturing ideas, creative problem solving, and – above all – collaboration that’s made Summit so successful.
If you’re feeling a bit uninspired or at a dead end, consider going to a conference, finding or founding a group of people interested in trading ideas, and seeking out those that can open your mind to new ways of thinking.
Elliott Bisnow, Brett Leve, Jeff Rosenthal, and Jeremy Schwartz are the founders of Summit, a global company that has produced more than 250 events over the last decade, and the co-owners of Powder Mountain, the largest ski resort in the United States. They were early investors in startups including Uber and Warby Parker, and they are actively involved with Conservation International, Beyond Conflict, and the Anti-Recidivism Coalition. All four are sought-after speakers and have been featured in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Economist, Bloomberg Businessweek, Time, and Fast Company.
Table of Contents
Title Page
Copyright
Epigraph
Foreword by Jody Levy
Introduction
Chapter 1: There’s No Better Building Block Than Trust
Chapter 2: Your Reach Should Always Exceed Your Grasp
Chapter 3: Ready, Fire, Aim
Chapter 4: Authenticity Trumps Perfection
Chapter 5: Replace Your Weaknesses with a Partner’s Strengths
Chapter 6: Know Your Definition of Success
Chapter 7: If You Want to Go Fast, Go Alone. If You Want to Go Far, Go Together
Chapter 8: Reputations Are Earned by the Drop and Lost by the Bucket
Chapter 9: Opportunities Can Come from Anywhere
Chapter 10: Mystery Makes History
Chapter 11: Culture Steamrolls Strategy
Chapter 12: A Single Connection Can Be Exponential
Chapter 13: When You Know How to Listen, Everybody Is a Guru
Chapter 14: You Don’t Get Chances, You Take Them
Chapter 15: Fortune Favors the Bold
Chapter 16: Throw Off the Bowlines
Chapter 17: You Have Two Ears and Only One Mouth. Use Them in That Ratio
Chapter 18: Cult Classic, Not Bestseller
Chapter 19: Life Is a Giving Competition, and We Intend to Win
Chapter 20: Don’t Keep It Real, Keep It Surreal
Chapter 21: Don’t Worry About Making Mistakes When You’re Making History
Chapter 22: No Idea Should Go Unspoken
Chapter 23: Leaders Don’t Have ; Followers; Leaders Create Other Leaders
Chapter 24: Live the Brand
Chapter 25: Bite Off More Than You Can Chew. You Can Figure Out How to Chew Later
Chapter 26: Honor Thy Error as the Hidden Intention
Chapter 27: It Only Has to Happen Once to Be Remembered
Chapter 28: Change Your Point of View to Change Your Point of View
Chapter 29: The Art of Social Sculpture
Chapter 30: Spaceships Don’t Come Equipped with Rear-View Mirrors
Chapter 31: When You Have the Right Opportunity, It’s Always the Right Time
Chapter 32: It’s Not About the Idea. It’s About the Execution.
Chapter 33: Unite the Core to Move the Masses
Chapter 34: Become a Favor Economy Millionaire
Chapter 35: Find the Tipping Domino
Chapter 36: Pressure Makes Diamonds
Chapter 37: The Road to Success Is Always Under Construction
Epilogue
Dedication
Acknowledgments
Index
About the Authors