Principles
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"Truth—or, more precisely, an accurate understanding of reality—is the essential foundation for any good outcome."
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"The two biggest barriers to good decision making are your ego and your blind spots."
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"Pain + Reflection = Progress."
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"Go to the pain rather than avoid it."
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"Great collaboration feels like playing jazz."
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"Dreams + Reality + Determination = A Successful Life."
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"Be radically open-minded and radically transparent."
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"When you have alignment, cherish it."
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Introduction
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📘 Principles: Life & Work is a 2017 nonfiction book by investor Ray Dalio that sets out his approach to life and management; the first edition was published by Simon & Schuster on 19 September 2017. [1] Dalio frames Bridgewater Associates’ culture as an “idea meritocracy” built on radical truth and radical transparency, and the book explains how those notions guide decisions and relationships. [2] A core device is believability-weighted decision making, implemented with tools such as real-time feedback (“Dot Collector”) and employee “baseball cards.” [3] Structurally, the volume pairs a brief memoir (“Where I’m Coming From”) with sections on “Life Principles” and “Work Principles,” followed by appendices and tools. [4] The prose is plainspoken and procedural, leaning on checklists, flow diagrams, and protocols intended to systemize behavior and decisions. [5] According to the publisher, the book became a #1 New York Times bestseller and has sold more than five million copies worldwide. [6] It won a 2018 Axiom Business Book Award and appeared on major bestseller lists, including The Washington Post’s hardcover nonfiction list on 15 October 2017. [7][8]
Chapter summary
This outline follows the Simon & Schuster hardcover edition (2017; ISBN 978-1-5011-2402-0).[1][9]
I – Where I'm coming from
🚀 1 – My call to adventure, 1949–1967. Growing up in a middle‑class Long Island home with a jazz‑musician father and a stay‑at‑home mother, he funneled caddying money into stocks and began an “investment library” by ordering Fortune 500 annual reports. Buying Northeast Airlines for less than $5 a share and watching it triple after a merger revealed how easily luck can masquerade as skill, pushing him to seek reasons behind results rather than rote memorization. The lesson is to follow curiosity, learn directly from reality, and build small, independent bets while paying attention to cause‑and‑effect. I just thought making money in the markets was easy, so I was hooked.
🚪 2 – Crossing the threshold, 1967–1979. A long run of bad economic surprises and deteriorating sentiment challenged 1960s optimism, teaching that the future rarely mirrors the present. Repeatedly buying into declines and losing money led to a better mental model: markets move on changes in expectations, and recency bias misleads investors. College at C. W. Post, exposure to commodity futures, meditation, and an early misfit with big‑firm culture culminated in starting Bridgewater in 1975 to pursue independent, principle‑driven work. I gradually learned that prices reflect people’s expectations, so they go up when actual results are better than expected and they go down when they are worse than expected.
🕳️ 3 – My abyss, 1979–1982. A highly public depression call—testimony on Capitol Hill and an appearance on Wall $treet Week—was overturned by a non‑inflationary recovery after the Fed eased, nearly wiping out his firm and forcing a painful reckoning. The crash reoriented him toward humility, historical pattern‑finding (“another one of those”), and decision rules that weigh probabilities rather than single forecasts. He reframed risk by combining uncorrelated bets to target lower risk with higher returns—the seed of the “Holy Grail of Investing.” I was dead wrong.
🧗 4 – My road of trials, 1983–1994. He rebuilt patiently—adding clients and a small team—while turning intuitions into explicit criteria, back‑testing them on deep historical data, and running algorithms alongside human judgment. The systemized approach held up in stress: during Black Monday in 1987 Bridgewater was short equities, finished the year up 22 percent, and was dubbed among the “Heroes of October.” He learned to size bets by conviction, replace whipsaw‑prone trend filters with value and risk controls, and treat computers as rigorous partners rather than oracles. Without them, Bridgewater would not have been nearly as successful as it turned out to be.
🏆 5 – The ultimate boon, 1995–2010. Bridgewater scaled from a 42‑person shop with $4.1 billion under management into an institution by hiring programming talent, codifying decision rules, and elevating future leaders such as Greg Jensen. The team pioneered inflation‑indexed‑bond strategies—briefing U.S. Treasury officials including Larry Summers—and then engineered the All Weather portfolio, a risk‑parity mix first run with internal capital and later adopted by clients like Verizon’s pension fund. By decade’s end, product innovation continued with Pure Alpha Major Markets, which drew heavy demand and was closed to new money by 2011. While they would have a well-established culture and agreed-upon principles that had worked for decades, the proof would be in the pudding.
🎁 6 – Returning the boon, 2011–2015. Life’s “third phase” came into view: step back from the CEO role, keep investing, and use time for teaching, philanthropy, and side explorations while reducing key‑person risk. Succession planning focused on transferring decision rights into a culture and set of principles strong enough to outlast the founder. The period also saw product expansion—most notably the launch of “Optimal Portfolio,” combining alphas and betas for a near‑zero‑rate world, which became the largest hedge‑fund launch on record. I had no idea how difficult the next year would be.
🧭 7 – My last year and my greatest challenge, 2016–2017. Operational slippage in areas like technology and recruiting triggered a hard governance test even as investing results held up, leading to a board‑driven reset. Greg Jensen exited the co‑CEO post to focus on co‑CIO duties; Eileen Murray shared the CEO role with a returning interim co‑CEO while the firm installed sturdier checks‑and‑balances advised by outside experts such as Jim Collins. After one year, a more resilient system allowed another handoff and a renewed path toward durable leadership beyond the founder. But right now I’m not thinking about the dying part; I’m thinking about how to live freely, and I’m excited about it.
🔭 8 – Looking back from a higher level. With distance, repeating patterns become visible as “another one of those,” enabling calmer, more analytical responses and a deeper respect for history’s cause‑and‑effect loops. Reality looks like a perpetual‑motion machine of linked forces; the practical task is to translate those patterns into usable principles for decisions, relationships, and organizations. The chapter also previews how to use the remaining sections, from high‑level ideas to mid‑ and sub‑principles. Life Principles is intended to be read in its entirety, while Work Principles is meant as more of a reference book.
II – Life principles
🌍 9 – Embrace reality and deal with it.
🛤️ 10 – Use the 5-step process to get what you want out of life.
🧠 11 – Be radically open-minded.
🧬 12 – Understand that people are wired very differently.
🎯 13 – Learn how to make decisions effectively.
🧩 14 – Life principles: putting it all together.
📋 15 – Summary and table of life principles.
III – Work principles
🗂️ 16 – Summary and table of work principles.
🏛️ 17 – To get the culture right ....
🔍 18 – Trust in radical truth and radical transparency.
🤝 19 – Cultivate meaningful work and meaningful relationships.
🧪 20 – Create a culture in which it is okay to make mistakes and unacceptable not to learn from them.
🔁 21 – Get and stay in sync.
⚖️ 22 – Believability weight your decision making.
🕊️ 23 – Recognize how to get beyond disagreements.
👥 24 – To get the people right ....
🧑🤝🧑 25 – Remember that the WHO is more important than the WHAT.
📝 26 – Hire right, because the penalties for hiring wrong are huge.
📊 27 – Constantly train, test, evaluate, and sort people.
⚙️ 28 – To build and evolve your machine ....
🕹️ 29 – Manage as someone operating a machine to achieve a goal.
🚫 30 – Perceive and don't tolerate problems.
🔬 31 – Diagnose problems to get at their roots.
🛠️ 32 – Design improvements to your machine to get around your problems.
✅ 33 – Do what you set out to do.
🧰 34 – Use tools and protocols to shape how work is done.
📜 35 – And for heaven's sake, don't overlook governance!
🗺️ 36 – Work principles: putting it all together.
📘 37 – Conclusion.
🧱 38 – Appendix: Tools and protocols for Bridgewater's idea meritocracy.
Background & reception
🖋️ Author & writing. Ray Dalio founded Bridgewater Associates in 1975 and spent decades documenting the rules he believed produced better decisions; those writings circulated internally as “Principles” long before the book. [10][11] In 2011, the New Yorker described that internal text as required reading for new hires and sketched its tri-part structure and “radical transparency” ethos. [12] The published book expands those materials into a hybrid of memoir and manual—opening with “Where I’m Coming From” and then setting out Life and Work Principles—while detailing instruments such as believability-weighted voting, the Dot Collector, and employee “baseball cards.” [1][13] Dalio has also traced Bridgewater’s embrace of “radical transparency” to the early 1990s, framing it as a way to reduce bias if applied with care. [14]
📈 Commercial reception. The publisher reports that Principles became a #1 New York Times bestseller and has sold more than five million copies worldwide. [15] It won the Axiom Business Book Award (Gold, Business Theory) in 2018. [16] In weekly charts, it entered Publishers Weekly Hardcover Nonfiction at #6 for the week ending 1 October 2017 and logged 22 weeks on that list by February 2018, and it ranked #4 on The Washington Post hardcover nonfiction list for 15 October 2017. [17][18]
👍 Praise. The Wall Street Journal noted that Dalio had “brought forth a sizable book” in which he codifies and explains how he uses his precepts, framing the work as both expansive and practical. [19] Wired called it a “fascinating” memoir-cum-management tome while highlighting the Dot Collector and other tools that animate its methods. [20] The publisher also quotes press notices—among them, The New York Times describing the book as “instructive and surprisingly moving,” and the Chicago Tribune dubbing it the business “it” book of 2017. [21]
👎 Criticism. Harvard Business Review cautioned that radical transparency can reduce bias only if implemented with discipline and guardrails, implying limits to direct transplantation of Bridgewater’s practices. [22] The New Yorker had earlier reported critics who saw Bridgewater’s culture—rooted in these principles—as cult-like, raising questions about generalizability beyond the firm. [23] And contemporaneous coverage scrutinized how “radical truth” played out in practice, describing strains and controversies around Bridgewater’s internal processes during the book’s release period. [24]
🌍 Impact & adoption. Beyond the book, Dalio released the free Principles in Action app (iOS/Android), which embeds the full text alongside videos and interactive case studies drawn from Bridgewater’s use of the principles. [25][26] He also popularized the ideas in a 2017 TED Talk, “How to build a company where the best ideas win,” which extends the book’s argument for meritocratic, tools-driven decision making. [27] Media coverage has documented organizational tools such as the Dot Collector being used inside Bridgewater as part of believability-weighted voting, illustrating the book’s influence on corporate process design. [28]
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References
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