Written by Intel's former CEO, this is one of the most respected management books ever written, treating management as a genuine discipline with measurable output, not a vague soft skill. Grove covers production principles applied to knowledge work, meeting design, performance reviews and decision-making with unusual clarity and rigour.
Key lessons
- A manager's output is the output of their team plus the output of neighbouring teams they influence — not their personal output alone.
- Meetings are a manager's core work medium, not a distraction from it — design them deliberately.
- The highest-leverage activities for a manager are training and giving feedback, because the impact multiplies across the whole team.
- Task-relevant maturity should determine management style — a skilled, experienced team member needs a very different approach from a new one.
Management is a genuine, learnable discipline with measurable leverage — treating it rigorously, rather than as an intuitive soft skill, produces dramatically better results.
What’s aged well
Remarkably well for a 1983 book — widely cited by modern Silicon Valley leaders as one of the best management books ever written.
What feels outdated
Some manufacturing-era examples need translating to knowledge work, though Grove does much of that translation himself.
The Business Stuff verdict
One of the most respected, rigorous management books available — dense but consistently rewarding.
Three things to actually do after reading it
- Audit your calendar for a week and check whether your highest-leverage activities (training, feedback) are actually getting protected time.
- Match your management style to each team member's task-relevant maturity, not a single default approach for everyone.
- Redesign your next recurring meeting around a specific, clear purpose rather than a habitual time slot.
If you liked this, read next
Five similar books
- The Hard Thing About Hard Things (Ben Horowitz)
- Measure What Matters (John Doerr)
- Radical Candor (Kim Scott)
- Multipliers (Liz Wiseman)
- Extreme Ownership (Jocko Willink & Leif Babin)

