Enough: True Measures Of Money, Business, And Life ✦
Bogle advocates for "stewardship over salesmanship". He believes organizations should be "over-managed but underled" and emphasizes that caring should be the soul of any great company.
The book posits that real fulfillment comes from three attributes: autonomy, connection with others, and the exercise of competence. Bogle’s "Rules for a Great Organization" Enough: True Measures of Money, Business, and Life
Bogle outlined ten principles for building enduring, value-driven institutions: Bogle advocates for "stewardship over salesmanship"
Inspired by a conversation between authors Kurt Vonnegut and Joseph Heller, Bogle argues that the most valuable thing one can possess is the "knowledge that I've got enough". Bogle’s "Rules for a Great Organization" Bogle outlined
He critiques the financial industry for prioritizing "too much cost" over value and "too much speculation" over actual investment. He famously notes that investors as a group often get exactly what they don't pay for, as high fees erode long-term returns.