You Exec - Principles by Ray Dalio
You Exec - Principles by Ray Dalio
You Exec - Principles by Ray Dalio
By Ray Dalio
Book
Summary
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SYNOPSIS
How did Ray Dalio, the child of an ordinary medium-class family create the world’s largest, and
most successful hedge fund, currently managing over $150 billion USD? In a word: principles.
Ray Dalio created a set of principles for personal and professional life that serves as an operating
system for living based on radical honesty and radical transparency thriving within an idea
meritocracy. An idea meritocracy is "a system that brings together smart, independent thinkers
and has them productively disagree to come up with the best possible collective thinking and
resolve their disagreements in a believability-weighted way." To "believability-weight"
something means to determine an idea's legitimacy based on the track record and the ability of
the idea's originator to clearly explain their concept. Dalio believes an idea meritocracy is the
best decision-making system because it requires honesty and leads to continual improvement.
Dalio divided his principles into Life Principles and Work Principles. The life principles apply to
individual success, and the work principles guide group success.
Dalio decided to share his principles to help others succeed. His goal is to inspire people to
discover and write their principles and to refine them through experience and reflection. Dalio
believes good, experience-tested principles can lead people to better decisions, more mutual
understanding, and superior outcomes.
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
CONCLUSION.......................................................................................................................................... 23
Manage as if Operating a Machine to Achieve a Goal ...................................................................... 23
What is Work? .................................................................................................................................... 24
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SUMMARY
Ray Dalio, the founder of Bridgewater, the world's largest hedge fund by assets, attributes his
success to a set of "principles" learned throughout his life. Principles are the essential learnings
of life that are absolute truths that withstand the test of time. It is for this reason that Ray Dalio
enjoys learning about neuroscience, human evolution, and how the mind works. The truths of
these topics do not change with time.
Dalio's humble beginnings in an ordinary middle-class family required that he be quite practical
and realistic if he wanted to succeed in life, especially in the financial sector. The financial
industry is dominated by time series. A time series of ever-changing asset prices—as the price of
stocks, bonds, commodities, and foreign currencies, among others change, it is very important to
identify the cause–effect or the root cause that leads to the price change. Often the root cause
may be hidden under layers of assumptions, mistakes, and human error. It is for this reason that
Dalio created his "principles." These principles allowed him to manage his hedge fund in such a
way to quickly identify the root cause of any mistakes and to implement parameters to prevent
such errors from happening again.
Dalio considers his mistakes as some of his most important life experiences because they led him
to discover the principles that now guide his decision-making. By reflecting on his mistakes and
turning those lessons into principles, Dalio eventually reached and surpassed his goals. Dalio
believes that every decision is within an individual's control, so with practice, careful reflection,
and the application of certain principles, anyone can greatly improve their decision-making
process.
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Be a Student of History
Once, following an international currency devaluation, Dalio expected the stock market to
plummet, and he took what he thought was an appropriate position. Instead, the stock market
jumped significantly, causing him to nearly go bankrupt. To prevent such a mistake happening
again, he set out to identify the principles he needed to put in place and studied past currency
devaluations from the beginning of time to the present to see what lessons he could learn. He
learned that what had just taken place had happened before many times in the past. Dalio calls
these moments in history "another one of those" moments, meaning that most everything has
happened many times before and will surely happen again. Perhaps the last time an event
occurred was before our lifetime, despite it being the first time we have experienced it. Most
events we experience have already happened multiple times in the past. As a consequence, if our
human psychology has not changed in the last thousand years, then by studying the past we
should be able to predict the future by finding "another one of those" earlier events.
Write It Down
Writing the principles down is important for reflecting on and refining them. Whenever Dalio
makes an investment, he writes down the criteria used in making his decision. At the conclusion
of the trade, he will reflect on how well the criteria worked. Similarly, for any given mistake, he
will write about it, reflect on why it happened, and then determine how to take corrective action
to avoid making the same mistake again. Taking this method to the next level, Bridgewater was
one of the first hedge funds to use computer algorithms to trigger trades. The set of criteria Dalio
uses today are algorithmic in nature.
Alpha-overlay Investing
Over time, Dalio created different investment instruments based on his principles. One of these is
the “alpha overlay” form of investing, where “alpha” means the “active return on investment
relative to the stock market” and “beta” is defined as the overall market performance.
Bridgewater defined “alpha” to identify a truth— that being, how much better were they doing
relative to the stock market in general.
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The result was a way of investing independent of the underlying market performance. In creating
alpha overlay as an investment management style, Dalio learned that part of being a successful
investor involves only taking highly confident bets and then diversifying those bets well. Though
alpha overlay is a common technique used today, it was his principles that allowed Bridgewater
to invent the term and seek out a truth about their performance.
Later in his career, Dalio worked with colleagues to create the best asset allocation mix for
preserving wealth over generations. Known as “risk parity” investing, it involves ensuring a mix
of assets that are positioned to do well in all economic environments. When the “risk parity”
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method was created, Dalio invested his savings in the algorithm that defined the “risk parity”
product—within a few years, his clients wanted to use the same tool, and in no time the product
had over $3 billion USD. Dalio attributes the “risk parity” product he developed to his principles.
On many occasions, Dalio has mentioned that it is solely due to his life and work principles that
Bridgewater has become the success it is today.
“Having a process that ensures problems are brought to the surface, and their root causes
diagnosed, assures that continual improvements occur.”
Bridgewater actively uses an “Issues Log” to track mistakes and ensure employees learn from
them. Anything that goes wrong is recorded in the issue log, including who is responsible for the
problem. The issue log also allows for diagnosing problems and tracking performance. At
Bridgewater, if a mistake happens or if there is an error, it is OK so long as it is documented in
the issue log and research is carried out to identify its root cause. If the mistake or error is not
logged, that’s when people could get fired.
The success of this tool inspired Dalio to create other tools, many of which Bridgewater has
since adopted, such as “Baseball Cards” of each employee. Here, Bridgewater collects data on
employees through reviews, tests, and by tracking individual choices. The company uses an
algorithm, the results of which are reviewed by people for objectivity and believability in order
to create a profile or “baseball card” for each person.
The baseball cards were created because Dalio identified a work principle (see below) which
dictated that the type of solution to a given problem type depends on the type of individual
assigned to solve the problem. For example, if a scientific person is assigned to a scientific
problem, the outcome of the solution can be more likely determined. However, if an artistic
person is assigned to a scientific problem, the outcome will be different– perhaps more
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qualitative than quantitative. Given this principle, Bridgewater uses the baseball cards to
determine the type of outcome they can expect from giving an employee a specific problem.
Dalio recognized how important tools could be in reinforcing Bridgewater’s principles. Others
could also learn from Bridgewater and identify common, recurring problems as opportunities to
craft solutions for their organizations that can be systematized and implemented via truth-based
principles and tools that reinforce and execute such principles.
“Principles are fundamental truths that serve as the foundations for behavior that gets you
what you want out of life.”
Dalio’s Life Principles are the overarching principles that guide his approach to everything. They
apply to any scenario, including personal life, nature, business, and policy. Learning effective
principles requires studying cause–effect relationships and patterns, as well as understanding
reality, embracing it, and, importantly, dealing with it. To create, use, and improve such
principles, one should:
1. Slow down and note the criteria being used to make a decision.
2. Write the criteria down in the form of a principle.
3. Think about those criteria the next time there is an outcome to assess, and refine them
before “another one of those” moments come along.
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To self-evaluate scenarios, Dalio practices transcendental meditation, also known as TM. While
meditating, he replays past events, identifies the lessons he needs to gain truths from the
experience, and implements actions that can guarantee that the next time the same scenario
happens, he will perform better.
1. Be a Hyperrealist
A hyperrealist balances their dreams with reality and a determination to achieve success. It’s
good to be a hyperrealist.
Savoring life and making an impact are not necessarily mutually exclusive, but overall, one has
to sacrifice a lot of time and thinking to identify new principles. Truths, which are the foundation
of principles, are hidden all around us. To discover them, one needs a scientific approach by
being a hyperrealist.
“Thoughtful disagreement” is when both parties are motivated by the genuine fear of missing
important perspectives. The ability to have thoughtful disagreement depends on whether the
individuals in the conversation are open- or closed-minded. Thoughtful disagreement can only
exist when individuals are open-minded.
Evolution is a permanent, powerful force that drives everything. It can also be life’s greatest
reward. Given evolution’s staying power, each person must continually evolve to stay ahead.
Rapid trial and error, learning, and change through action are essential to evolving effectively.
Being a good person means operating consistently with the laws of reality while contributing to
the evolution of the whole.
Pain serves a valuable purpose: it keeps people alert and moving in the right direction. Many
people try to avoid it, whether it is physical or emotional (e.g., frustration, sadness, shame).
However, pain is unavoidable, especially in the pursuit of an ambitious goal. The presence of
pain can even be positive; it is an indicator that a new solution is needed to move forward.
Developing the habit of reflecting on pain is essential to making progress. The ideal time to
reflect and draw key lessons is while experiencing pain. This is difficult, so reflecting after the
pain subsides is also helpful. Bridgewater addresses these conflicting benefits by using a “Pain
Button”. The Pain Button is an application designed for people to record emotions as they feel
them, and then to return to them later to reflect on them through guided reflection questions.
Users specify what they will do to address the situation. The tool tracks the frequency and cause
of pain as well as whether action steps are taken, and their effectiveness.
7. Confront Weaknesses
Once weaknesses are identified, there are four choices to manage them:
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I. Deny the weaknesses. Most people do this and it is the worst choice.
II. Accept the weaknesses and work to convert them into strengths. This is usually the best
path, if it works! A good way to know whether this will work is to consider whether the
steps necessary are consistent with your nature and natural abilities.
III. Accept the weaknesses and find ways around them. This is the easiest and often most
viable path, but the one least followed.
IV. Change your goals. This is a good option for people willing to be flexible.
To confront weaknesses:
I. Do not confuse what you wish were true with what is really true.
II. Do not worry about looking good—worry instead about achieving your goals.
III. Do not overweight first-order consequences relative to second/third-order ones.
IV. Do not let pain stand in the way of progress.
V. Do not blame bad outcomes on anyone but yourself.
The ways to adapt and overcome ego and blind spots are to:
I. Teach the brain to work in ways that don’t come naturally.
II. Use compensation mechanisms, such as programmed reminders.
III. Rely on others for help who are strong in areas where a personal weakness exists.
To be radically open-minded:
I. Sincerely believe that you might not have the best answers and recognize that the ability
to deal well with not knowing the answer is more important than knowing the answer.
II. Recognize that decision-making is a two-step process of (1) taking in all the relevant
information, typically called “learning,” and (2) deciding.
III. Don’t worry about looking good; instead, worry about achieving goals.
IV. Realize that you can’t be productive or contribute effectively without first learning.
V. Empathize by temporarily suspending judgment.
VI. Remember to look for the best answer, not just the best answer you come up with
yourself.
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VII. Know when to argue and when to seek to understand. Decide which is most appropriate
based on the knowledge of each person involved.
1. Synthesize Well
To synthesize well:
I. Synthesize the situation at hand: Determine which facts are important and which ones are
not. Find reliable and experienced individuals familiar in the space in question and ask
them whatever information is needed. Take a step back from the situation to gain
perspective. Sometimes, allowing some time to pass before making a decision helps.
Avoid fixating too much on any one piece of information.
II. Synthesize the situation through time: Collect, analyze, and sort different types of
information, categorizing outcomes by type and quality. Graph the results over time, and
patterns will emerge. Keep in mind the rates of change and the levels of improvement,
and how the two are related. An acceptable rate of improvement depends on the rate of
change, e.g., an improvement with too slow a rate of change is not sufficient. Use the
80/20 Rule to avoid getting dragged into unnecessary detail: 80% of value comes from
20% of the effort or information.
III. Navigate levels effectively: Reality exists at different levels and each gives a different but
valuable perspective. Keep all levels in mind while synthesizing and deciding.
penalty times its probability of occurring. A good decision is one where the reward’s expected
value is greater than the penalty’s. The best decision is the one with the highest expected value.
Raising the probability of being right is valuable no matter how high that probability already is.
Even the best choices have a few cons, so the existence of cons doesn’t necessarily make a
choice bad.
3. Weigh the Value of Additional Information Against the Cost of Not Deciding
Constantly evaluate the marginal benefit of having more information against the marginal cost of
waiting to decide. Separate the “must-dos” from the “like-to-dos” and ensure that all the “must-
dos” are above the bar and on track before addressing the “like-to-dos”. Similarly, make time for
the important things such that it becomes okay if you don’t have time to deal with the
unimportant. Keep everything in perspective and avoid mistaking possibilities for probabilities.
Weight everything up in terms of its likelihood and prioritize accordingly.
Dalio’s “Work Principles” are essentially the “Life Principles” applied to groups. Dalio believes
that the work principles are even more important than the life principles because “the power of a
group is so much greater than the power of an individual.” The work principles’ target audience
is those who view work as a means of following a passion and achieving a mission.
Great people have great character (they’re truthful, transparent, and committed) and great
capabilities (able to excel at their jobs). Great cultures address problems and disagreements
directly and solve them well.
To guide the best decision-making, find the most believable people who disagrees with an idea
and try to understand their thinking. Pay less attention to a person’s conclusion and more to the
reasoning that led to it. In addition to encouraging humility, believability-weighted decisions
increase the chances of being right.
level” you understands the benefit of radical truth and radical transparency, the subconscious,
“lower-level” you is skeptical, impatient, and easily frustrated. Adapting can take about eighteen
months.
to themselves. To be considerate means to allow others to do what they want, as long as it’s
consistent with the company’s principles and the law, and to be willing to put others ahead of
oneself. Understanding the difference between fairness and generosity is important too. Not
every generous act needs to be equal. On the management side, determine what is fair and be on
the far (generous) side of it, including making sure that employees are well paid.
Be aware that the size of an organization can hurt or prevent meaningful relationships. As a
company grows, it needs to carefully consider how to maintain a sense of community. For
Bridgewater, having departments of 50–150 people helped maintain their sense of community
even as they grew.
Observe mistakes for patterns. Write down mistakes and infer connections between them. Then
identify the biggest, most common weakness, known at Bridgewater as the “one big challenge.”
No one can see themselves objectively, so everyone should help others learn what is true about
themselves by providing honest feedback, by holding them accountable, and by working through
disagreements in an open-minded way. The worst mistake someone can make is not owning up
to their mistake. Penalize people who cover up mistakes, and foster a culture in which
highlighting a mistake is normal.
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2. Don’t Confuse the Right to Complain, Give Advice, and Openly Debate with the Right to
Make Decisions
Everyone has their role, responsibilities, and authority based on their demonstrated ability.
Challenging and probing individuals and managers alike can improve thinking and provide
alternative perspectives. Advice and debate move throughout the hierarchy, but the decision-
making authority does not transfer.
important. They are learned tools (e.g., writing computer code, speaking a foreign language).
Values and abilities rarely change, while skills can be acquired.
Greatness comes from focusing on where improvements are needed. Therefore, accurate
criticism is more valuable than compliments. While it is important to tell people where they are
excelling, it is even more important to highlight their weaknesses and ask them to reflect on
them.
The two biggest mistakes with assessing people are: (a) being overconfident in the assessment
and (b) failing to get in sync about it. To avoid these pitfalls:
I. Assess in nonhierarchical ways that encourage everyone to speak freely.
II. Learn about each other through candid conversations about mistakes and their root
causes.
III. Help people work through the pain that comes from confronting weaknesses by
communicating calmly, contextualizing the feedback, and giving the person time and
space to process before having a follow-up conversation.
IV. Most importantly, to help people succeed do two things: allow them to see their failures
so clearly that they are genuinely motivated to change, and then show them how they can
change or work with others who are strong where they are not.
Conclusion
“Probe deep and hard to learn what to expect from the machine.”
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Daily updates are an effective tool for keeping up with what a manager’s team is doing and
thinking. As part of the probing, “probe to the level below the people who report to you.”
Observing a direct reporting team ensures an understanding of how the person who reports to a
manager adds value to the machine. Furthermore, the individuals who report to the managers
who report to you should feel comfortable escalating their problems to you. In some
organizations, this is frowned upon, but at Bridgewater, this helps create upward accountability.
What is Work?
People should view work as an opportunity to achieve a combination of three things:
1. To accomplish a desired mission together in bigger and better ways than one could do
alone.
2. To develop quality relationships that together make for a great community.
3. To earn money to buy what’s wanted and needed for oneself and others.
The above are mutually supportive. It’s up to each person to decide how much of each they want.