Review: Conscious Capitalism
Whew! I finally finished Conscious Capitalism: Liberating the Heroic Spirit of Business by John Mackey and Raj Sisodia. It took me awhile to get through this book because, honestly, it’s not a page-turner. I was excited to read it - it jumped ahead of about 25 books I Amazon Premium’d that sit accumulating in a pile, still unread - but found the format too much like an undergrad honor’s thesis: In Part II, for instance, here’s a breakdown of your stakeholders, in case you forgot. I guess it’s valuable information but maybe a little dry?
Mackey and Sisodia use this book to explain their new business philosophy, in which running a business can and should incorporate four tenets: higher purpose, stakeholder integration, conscious leadership, and conscious culture and management. The idea is that companies that strive towards these tenets produce the best returns for all of their stakeholders, including their shareholders. Conscious capitalism shows that companies that integrate purpose and sustainability don’t have to sacrifice profit.
The Forbes.com review called the book “a true guide to the future”, and it’s not wrong. Out of the CC philosophy and book grew an organization and community, and I agree that it's important to think differently about capitalism, the role of business, and the value of being stakeholder- rather than shareholder-oriented. But for me, this book was missing clarity.
I am a big Whole Foods fan, always finding reasons to go there when I’m in the US, and I wanted to learn more about its story. But this book couldn’t really decide if it was a biography of John Mackey and Whole Foods or an explanation of conscious capitalism, of which Whole Food is one of many examples. This ambivalence was frustrating because I wanted to know more about Whole Foods but couldn’t see the clear connection between it and the other companies featured, like Tata or the Container Store. The profiled companies played second fiddle to Whole Foods, and I wasn’t quite convinced that they were all great examples.
The most interesting part for me came after I finished the book: In June, Amazon, a company the book praises as a model of conscious capitalism but that has seen its share of criticism (many many times), bought Whole Foods, the company founded and run by author John Mackey, for $13.7 billion. What could this mean for the future of both businesses? What does this say about the integrity of Whole Foods and conscious capitalism? What will be the impact on independent grocers and smaller chains - and what does that say about conscious capitalism? So many questions; only time has the answers.
Overall, I give Conscious Capitalism 3 out of 5 stars. It came out in 2014 and so far has an average rating of 3.84 on Goodreads and 4.3 on Amazon.












