Save over 90% off
$0.99$0.99
- For a limited time, join Audible for only $0.99/mo for the first 3 months.
- 1 bestseller or new release each month from our entire selection - yours to keep.
- Listen all you want to thousands of included audiobooks, podcasts & Audible Originals.
- After 3 months, $14.95/mo. No commitment. Cancel online anytime.

Enjoy a free trial on us
$0.00$0.00
- One credit a month to pick any title from our entire premium selection to keep (you’ll use your first credit now).
- Unlimited listening on select audiobooks, Audible Originals, and podcasts.
- You will get an email reminder before your trial ends.
- $14.95$14.95 a month after 30 days. Cancel online anytime.
Buy
-13% $19.10$19.10
Delivering Happiness: A Path to Profits, Passion, and Purpose
Audible Audiobook
– Unabridged
In this, his first audiobook, Tony Hsieh - the widely admired CEO of Zappos, the online shoe retailer - explains how he created a unique culture and commitment to service that aims to improve the lives of employees, customers, vendors, and backers. Using anecdotes and stories from his own life experiences, and from other companies, Hsieh provides concrete ways that companies can achieve unprecedented success. Even better, he shows how creating happiness and record results go hand-in-hand.
He starts with the "Why" in a section where he narrates his quest to understand the science of happiness. Then he runs through the ten Zappos "Core Values" - such as "Deliver WOW through Service", "Create Fun and A Little Weirdness", and "Build a Positive Team and Family Spirit" - and explains how you and your colleagues should come up with your own.
Hsieh then details many of the unique practices at Zappos that have made it the success it is today, such as their philosphy of allocating marketing money into the customer experience, thereby allowing repeat customers and word-of-mouth be their true form of marketing. He also explains why Zappos's number-one priority is company culture and his belief that once you get the culture right, everything else - great customer service, long-term branding - will happen on its own.
Finally, Delivering Happiness explains how Zappos employees actually apply the Core Values to improving their lives outside of work - and to making a difference in their communities and the world.
- Listening Length8 hours and 17 minutes
- Audible release dateJune 7, 2010
- LanguageEnglish
- ASINB003QADCNS
- VersionUnabridged
- Program TypeAudiobook
Read & Listen
Get the Audible audiobook for the reduced price of $12.99 after you buy the Kindle book.
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find the book delightful, engaging, and fun to read. They also describe the content as inspiring, insightful, and motivating. Readers describe the writing style as casual, easy to follow, and understand. They appreciate the good story and interesting business stories. In addition, they find the humor humorous and personable. Additionally, customers mention the digital download is easy to use and hard to put down.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the book delightful, engaging, and fun to read. They say it's a fantastic read for MBA students and those who want to learn how to manage. Readers also mention the story is worth their time.
"...That book is fantastic read for all MBA students and those who wants to learn how to manage team." Read more
"...The journey Tony takes the readers on is both very educational and exciting...." Read more
"...And Tony is a pretty good story-teller which makes the book quite engaging and he does introduce some innovations in how companies are run that I..." Read more
"...This book is very interesting because it shows people how to build and manage a successful business in a rather unusual way...." Read more
Customers find the book inspiring, insightful, and practical. They say it shares great gems of wisdom, important lessons for how a business should treat customers, and practical steps that deliver happiness. Readers also mention the book is outstanding, relevant, and helpful to anyone thinking.
"...It allows employees to self-organize to complete work in a way that increases productivity, foster innovation and empowers anyone in the company..." Read more
"...Along the path, he shares great gems of wisdom that he has collected both on from a personal basis and an organizational perspective...." Read more
"...The book is a quick read, an interesting story and contains some useful insights. Yet, I wouldn't rate it as a 5 star book either...." Read more
"...What I especially liked about this book is that it made me think outside of the box...." Read more
Customers find the book very readable, easy to follow, and understand. They also say it's a quick read with a casual writing style. Readers mention the book is engaging and funny at times. They say it's light reading that humanizes business writing.
"...The book is a quick read, an interesting story and contains some useful insights. Yet, I wouldn't rate it as a 5 star book either...." Read more
"...What are these authors doing that is so special? They are humanizing business writing and their efforts are redefining what it means to build a..." Read more
"...The book is refreshingly humble, conversational, reflective and open. We get a glimpse into his early years and how he became the man he is today...." Read more
"...Hsieh writes well, and the book is engaging and quite funny at times...." Read more
Customers find the story quality of the book good, amazing, and interesting. They appreciate the perspective on customers. Readers also say the book is great about an entrepreneur, Tony Hsieh, and Zappos. They say it's easy to read and will make you smile.
"...And Tony is a pretty good story-teller which makes the book quite engaging and he does introduce some innovations in how companies are run that I..." Read more
"...Tony Hsieh, the CEO of Zappos, delivers a compelling story explaining how Zappos started and what they had to overcome to rise to the top...." Read more
"nice story" Read more
"My mini-synopsis: This book gives a great history of how Tony Hsieh and Zappos rose to fame...." Read more
Customers find the stories humorous, charming, and inspiring. They also say the author is personable, a great storyteller, and has a playful spirit.
"...Hsieh writes well, and the book is engaging and quite funny at times...." Read more
"...The first part is funny and engaging, but I agree with some of the negative reviews that Tony paints a picture of easy come, easy money...." Read more
"...Additionally, Tony has a great writing style that is very informal and funny...." Read more
"...Tony’s anecdotes explain why he made his business decisions and can be pretty funny...." Read more
Customers find the book straightforward, accessible, and impactful. They also say the digital download is very easy to use. Readers mention the book is hard to put down and intuitive.
"...during Fall 2015, and although this was required reading, I found it easy and enjoyable." Read more
"This book was very easy for me to relate to. He was a guy who just wanted to hang out with friends while making a lot of money...." Read more
"This book was funny, insightful, personal, and straight-forward. Tony Hsieh puts his life out on the page for everyone to read...." Read more
"...I was intrigued to learn more so picked up this book. It’s a wonderfully easy, funny and very inspiring read; I feel very motivated to apply the..." Read more
Customers find the style interesting, authentic, charming, and inspiring. They say the book is highly original, quick, and engaging. Readers also mention it paints a clear picture of how to move forward on the path to success.
"...hand the culture of the company, the employees were happy, helpful and jovial...." Read more
"...All of his stories were humorous, charming, and above all, inspiring...." Read more
"...inspired by other people's success stories, but I found this book highly original, inspiring and motivating...." Read more
"...or serving others, then you’ll find this book to be profoundly, astonishingly smug, narcissistic, shallow, misguided, and downright disturbing...." Read more
Customers find the book well worth the investment of money and time. They say it has an interesting view of profits, passion, and happiness. Readers also appreciate the transparent and genuine approach to values, business, and success.
"...Its well worth the investment of money and time...." Read more
"...company culture, the info (if implemented) could IMO not only be very profitable, but could help a company set up their legacy path...." Read more
"Very interesting view profit, passion an happiness" Read more
"...Do yourself a favor. Read this. It is one of the best investments of your time you will ever make." Read more
Reviews with images

From selling worms to selling Happiness!
-
Top reviews
Top reviews from the United States
There was a problem filtering reviews right now. Please try again later.
Before Zappos, he had founded LinkExchange which he sold to Microsoft for $265 million. The reason he gave for selling was LinkExchange was as it grew, it lost culture and felt like it was a different company and it get to the point he dreaded getting out of the bed in the morning to go to the office. After this, he started venture fund from which he funded Zappos’s founder. Initially, Zappos struggle because it fulfilled orders with drop shipments which did not worked well because it did not have accurate information about vendors’ inventory, and because their warehouses were all over the country, delivery times weren’t predictable. Later, he began buying inventory from manufacturers, which was freezing its capital and also relying on a third party to manage its warehouse. He recalled that it never makes sense to outsource call center and warehousing because Zappos’s higher purpose is to provide the best customer service which is only possible when it has pulse of what customer want. He felt that trusting a third party would care about its customers as much as Zappos would was one of our biggest mistakes.
In the book, he talks about when Zappos was losing money and could not get any more money to run its operation, they figure out that while cutting marketing expense, only thing they can do is to focusing on the customer service. He sees his company offering the best customer services possible. He eluded couple times that Zappos could get in to many other areas including offering the airline services. Later he talks about how reading book; he learned that great company has a greater purpose and bigger vision beyond just making money or being number one in a market. He would later create a book club where each employee would read a book and discuss about it and apply lesson learned at Zappos. Unlike many businesses that put the need of the investors as the center of the business, he put the need of the customer as the core, yet believes that he needs to meet the needs and desires of all stakeholders. Tony put the best customer service at his end goal, for which he put making his employee happy as his primary target. He believes that his effort to make his employee happy will in turn make his customer happy.
Tony Hsieh saw his role as the philosopher. He sold his first company LinkExchange to Microsoft, because he felt that it lost its soul and reach to where he dreaded getting out of the bed in the morning to go to the office. When he invested on Zappos, and then become involved in it, he knew the culture was important. From early on, he develops a culture that he likes. As a CEO, he does not have authority like in the typical American organization. At Zappos, he saw his role as the gardener that allows everybody around him to flourish. Hsieh put the customer’s interest as his end goal. Employees are trained to have lifelong relationship with a customer. And there are growing list of CEO who toured Zappos to learn from Zappos insight and bought his idea and have implemented at their organization.
In this book, he talks about creating a culture that would outlast him. He believe that if it get the culture right, then most of the other stuff like delivering great customer service or building a long-term enduring brand or business will be a natural byproduct. Culture starts with the hiring. Zappos uses two sets of interview: one by the hiring manager for the job specific role; and second by HR which is purely for the culture fit. To hire, a prospective candidate has to be pass both. It also fires employee if they are bad for the culture even though they are doing well on their job specific role. At Zappos, they hired only people they would enjoy hanging out with after hours.
This book talks about meritocracy system which Hsieh implemented in 2012. It allows employees to self-organize to complete work in a way that increases productivity, foster innovation and empowers anyone in the company with the ability to make decisions that push the company forward. All employees are part of one or more circle. People on the circle can fire another people on the circle. All employees can remove themselves from a circle and move to another circle. As a CEO, Hsieh cannot hire or fire his employee. This kind of system requires trust first. He was able to build trust by developing a culture that stems from intrinsic motivation rather than extrinsic motivation. He frees his call center employee in many ways to build a lifelong relationship. One way he empowers customer service reps is by not measuring call times, not allowing them to upsell, and not using a script.
It talks about how leader can affect an organization’s future by sharing his values. When things are changing fast, employees need a vision of the destination that lies beyond the horizon; they also need to understand the principles by which they must navigate their course. Without the strong value that is shared and engrained to the culture, an organization will probably lose their direction and fail. Unlike many other companies that may take only senior leadership to retreat to develop company value, he email to all his employees about their input. From all employees’ input, Zappos developed 10 core values. Since all employees have contributed to this value, they embody the company value. One value is to be adventurous, creative and open-minded which displays how his employees have embodied Zappos value.
Another value he talks about is to “deliver wow through service”. To WOW, employee must differentiate themselves, which means do something a little unconventional and innovative. Once a year, Zappos ask its employee to write what Zappos cultures mean to them and publish them as a “Culture book” which is an employee review of a company and is a great way to communicate with its employee.
That book is fantastic read for all MBA students and those who wants to learn how to manage team.
The journey Tony takes the readers on is both very educational and exciting. Along the path, he shares great gems of wisdom that he has collected both on from a personal basis and an organizational perspective. These include but are not limited to: management, leadership, following one's passion, relationship building etc. His passion for vision, values and happiness radiates through and is very contagious and inspirational. Having personally experienced Zappos WOW experience, I can truly say that the material preached by the CEO is truly believed in and practiced throughout the organization. A highly recommended book!
Below are excerpts from the book that I found particularly insightful:
1- "One of the most interesting things about playing poker was learning the discipline of not confusing the right decision with the individual outcome of any single hand, but that's what a lot of poker players do. If they win a hand, they assume they made the right bet, and if they lose a hand, they often assume they made the wrong bet. With the coin that lands on heads a third of the time, this would be like seeing the coin land on heads once (the individual outcome) and changing your behavior so you bet on heads, when the mathematically correct thing to do is to always bet on tails no matter what happened in the previous coin flip (the right decision)."
2- "We learned that we should never outsource our core competency. As an e-commerce company, we should have considered warehousing to be our core competency from the beginning. Outsourcing that to a third party and trusting that they would care about our customers as much as we would was one of our biggest mistakes. If we hadn't reacted quickly, it would have eventually destroyed Zappos."
3- "Looking back, a big reason we hit our goal early was that we decided to invest our time, money, and resources into three key areas: customer service (which would build our brand and drive word of mouth), culture (which would lead to the formation of our core values), and employee training and development (which would eventually lead to the creation of our Pipeline Team)."
4- "We believe that it's really important to come up with core values that you can commit to. And by commit, we mean that you're willing to hire and fire based on them. If you're willing to do that, then you're well on your way to building a company culture that is in line with the brand you want to build. You can let all of your employees be your brand ambassadors, not just the marketing or PR department. And they can be brand ambassadors both inside and outside the office."
5- "The best leaders are those that lead by example and are both team followers as well as team leaders. We believe that in general, the best ideas and decisions are made from the bottom up, meaning by those on the front lines that are closest to the issues and/or the customers. The role of a manager is to remove obstacles and enable his/her direct reports to succeed. This means the best leaders are servant-leaders. They server those they lead."
6- "While we celebrate our individual and team successes, we are not arrogant nor do we treat others differently from how we would want to be treated. Instead, we carry ourselves with quiet confidence, because we believe that in the long run our character will speak for itself."
7- "Your personal core values define who you are, and a company's core values ultimately define the company's character and brand. For individuals, character is destiny. For ogranizations, culture is destiny."
8- "Happiness is really just about four things: perceived control, perceived progress, connectedness (number and depth of your relationships), and vision/meaning (being part of something bigger than yourself)."
Top reviews from other countries




The book talks about higher concepts of life such as passion and purpose perfected to discovering our innate happiness! :)
What to expect in the book and why I love it :
1) Storytelling interesting narrative of how Zappos came into existence.
2) Deep, personal stories of employees, stakeholders, vendors and everyone else in the company on how they got together and interacted as a big Zappos family.
3) The core culture values of Zappos make things interesting for aspiring entrepreneurs in any field, to apply in the real world of business.
Also, the late Tony's personal philosophy alignes with Zappos culture and core values. Zappos has lived through the key area of becoming a customer centric company while delivering happiness. Plenty of takeaways to adopt in business. A must-read :)
