Founders
Episode 104 #104 Ingvar Kamprad (IKEA)
Founders

Episode 104: #104 Ingvar Kamprad (IKEA)

Founders

Episode 104

#104 Ingvar Kamprad (IKEA)

David Senra is the host of Founders, where he studies history's greatest entrepreneurs. This is what he learned from reading Leading By Design: The Ikea Story by Ingvar Kamprad and Bertil Torekull.

What I learned from reading Leading By Design: The Ikea Story by Ingvar Kamprad and Bertil Torekull.

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[0:01]  He aims to give his company eternal life 

[3:45] Early life and entrepreneurship  

[8:00] The beginning of IKEA 

[11:40] Learning entrepreneurship by imitating 

[16:30] IKEA almost dies in infancy / how Ingvar worked his way through it 

[26:00] Ingvar’s greatest regret in life: Neglecting his children for his business. “Everyone with children knows that childhood does not allow itself to be reconquered.” 

[32:20] Only those asleep make no mistakes. — Ingvar Kamprad 

[36:00] Thinking of the first store as a laboratory 

[43:43] Why IKEA stumbled upon self assembled furniture 

[46:30] A summary of the early history of IKEA 

[49:00] How Ingvar managed 

[54:00] Why Ingvar refused to go public 

[1:03:30] The IKEA Company Bible: The Testament of a Furniture Dealer 

[1:19:10] Ingvar the Misfit  

A list of all the books featured on Founders Podcast.

#104 Ingvar Kamprad (IKEA)

Introduction

Imagine one of the coldest little countries in the world, think of the most barren part of that country, see in front of you a godforsaken place, deep in the wild forests. This book is about a man who grew up in this harsh environment, which was to mark his whole life and fundamentally color the philosophy with which he built his vast empire, consisting of thousands of employees and millions of customers all over the world. The man is Ingvar Kamprad, furniture dealer. He aims to give his firm eternal life. It's a long way to the country where an empire was built. Here, where he was born, loneliness, silence, and reserve prevail.

The cottages have always been small. Survival has never been taken for granted. In this stony silence, this harsh moraine and morality, the dream of IKEA first grew. For everything requires its special soil. This is where the rough outline of the whole concept began to be written by dyslexic boy on a farm. Two empty hands, the myth says, he built an empire from nothing. But what are two empty hands, and what is really meant by nothing? Do love and encouragement, innate energy, desire for revenge, imagination and curiosity all count for nothing? Of course, they count.

This is not a book about a man starting out empty-handed. On the contrary, it is a book about a man with his hands full of resolute dreams, a heart tormented by inadequacy and self-pity, and a stubborn and inquisitive enterprise, a strange mixture of a social animal and an eccentric. The book is equally about a firm in which he realized and through which he lived out all these circumstances for good or bad. Objections may well arise to the idea of summarizing an outstanding and natural genius so simply, or the elevation of the work of an incorrigible capitalist, so restlessly obsessed by the lure of profit and power that used 1,000 tricks to endow his creation with eternal life. Others will recognize themselves for all of us bear within us the embryo of a miracle.

All right, so that is from -- that's an excerpt from the book that I read this week and the one I'm going to talk to you about today, which is Leading by Design: The IKEA Story, and it was written by Bertil Torekull. Okay, so two quick things before I jump into the rest of the book. One, I want to tell you how I discovered this book. I stumbled upon this online discussion where people were trying to figure out what is the largest company in the world that's owned by a single individual. And because these companies are private, it's really hard to know the accurate answer, but there's a good chance that Ingvar Kamprad was that person. He founded IKEA at 17 years old. And before he died, he died at 91, I think, in 2018, Bloomberg put his estimated net worth around $58 billion.

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