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Solve For Happy: Engineer Your Path to Joy Paperback – 18 January 2019
| Mo Gawdat (Author) Find all the books, read about the author, and more. See search results for this author |
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Enhance your purchase
- Print length368 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherBluebird
- Publication date18 January 2019
- Reading age18 years and up
- Dimensions13 x 2.5 x 19.6 cm
- ISBN-101509809953
- ISBN-13978-1509809950
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Product description
Review
He explains how even in the face of the unthinkable, happiness is still possible. ― Stylist
By applying his formula, we stop asking, “Why me; why now; what if?” and focus on how we can make the best of life, despite the pain we may feel. ― Psychologies
Mo has an incredible gift to inspire, educate and teach others how to be happy. -- Lewis Howes, author of The Mask of Masculinity and New York Times bestseller, The School of Greatness
A fun read, with tips for steering clear of 'unhappiness traps'. ― The Scotsman
About the Author
Mo Gawdat is a serial entrepreneur, the former chief business officer of Google [X] and author of Solve for Happy, Scary Smart, and That Little Voice in Your Head. Mo has cofounded more than twenty businesses in fields such as health and fitness, food and beverage and real estate. He served as a board member in several technology, health and fitness and consumer goods companies as well as several government technology and innovation boards in the Middle East and Eastern Europe. He mentors tens of start-ups at any point in time.
Outside of work, when he’s not writing or reading up on business and the latest technology innovations and trends, Mo spends his time drawing charcoal portraits, creating mosaics, carpentry and indulging in his passion for restoration of classic cars.
Product details
- Publisher : Bluebird (18 January 2019)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 368 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1509809953
- ISBN-13 : 978-1509809950
- Reading age : 18 years and up
- Item Weight : 263 g
- Dimensions : 13 x 2.5 x 19.6 cm
- Country of Origin : India
- Best Sellers Rank: #46,394 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #119 in Emotional Self Help
- #385 in Self-Esteem (Books)
- #427 in Self-Help for Happiness
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Mo Gawdat is the Chief Business Officer for Google [X], a serial entrepreneur and author of “Solve for Happy.”
Mo has an impressive combined career of 27 years, starting at IBM Egypt as a Systems Engineer before moving to a sales role in the government sector. Venturing in to the UAE, Mo joined NCR Abu Dhabi to cover the non-finance sector. He then became acquainted with the consumer goods industry as Regional Manager of BAT. At Microsoft he assumed various roles over a span of seven and a half years, in his last role at Microsoft he headed the Communications Sector across Emerging Markets worldwide.
Mo joined Google in 2007 to kick-start its business in Emerging Markets. He is fascinated by the role that technology plays in empowering people in emerging communities and has dedicated years of his career towards that passion. Over a period of 6 years, Mo started close to half of Google’s operations worldwide.
In 2013 he moved to Google's infamous innovation arm, Google [X] where he lead the business strategy, planning, sales, business development and partnerships. [X] does not attempt to achieve incremental improvements in the way the world works, but instead, it tries to develop new technologies that will reinvent the way things are and deliver a radical, ten fold—10X—improvement. This leads to seemingly SciFi ideas such as: Project Loon, which aims to use high-altitude balloons to provide affordable internet access to the 5 billion people on every square inch of our planet, Project Makani, aiming to revolutionize wind energy generation using autonomous carbon fiber kites as well as Self driving cars, Google Life Sciences, and many more. The business team under Mo’s leadership has designed innovative business models analogous to the disruptive technologies [X] creates, and has created deep partnerships and global deals that enabled [X] to thrive and build products fit for the real world.
Alongside his career, Mo remained a serial entrepreneur who has cofounded more than 20 businesses in fields such as health and fitness, food and beverage and real estate. He served as a board member in several technology, health and fitness and consumer goods companies as well as several government technology and innovation boards in the Middle East and Eastern Europe. He mentors tens of start-ups at any point in time.
Mo Gawdat is the author of “Solve for Happy: Engineering Your Path to Joy” (2017). Through his 12 year research on the topic of happiness, he created an algorithm and a repeatable well engineered model to reach a state of uninterrupted happiness regardless of the circumstances of life. Mo's happiness model proved highly effective. And, in 2014, was put to the ultimate test when Mo lost his son Ali to preventable medical error during a simple surgical procedure. Solve For Happy is the pillar for a mission Mo has committed to as his personal moonshot, a mission to deliver his happiness message to 10 million people around the world.
Mohammad speaks Arabic, English, German. Outside of work, when he’s not writing or reading up on business and the latest technology innovations and trends, Mo spends his time drawing charcoal portraits, creating mosaics, carpentry and indulging in his passion for restoration of classic cars.
Customer reviews
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Top reviews from India
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I gave it to my friends of BeAnimal Hostel in Koramangala, Bangalore. They have a nice library for their guests and I felt the book fits in there perfectly.
You will know how to tackle difficulties and every negative situation in your life.
The only thing is this book seller didn't give me page marker. Book quality is satisfactory.
I liked how author helps us dissociate with our thought and stay happy despite worst situatiins in life!
I must read for all those who are stressed in todays corporate world.
Top reviews from other countries
Briefly, to move from suffering to happiness to joy, it is necessary to see through the six grand illusions, such as our illusions of control, fear, etc, and our seven blind spots, such as our tendency to label, assume, and rely excessively on our faulty memories, and come to terms with the five eternal truths, such as love, death and design.
The book is written in a friendly, engaging manner (with lots of smilies!) - the author comes across as highly likeable - examples are generally well chosen, and he has made a lot of effort to write a book that is easy to read and understand. A lot of what he says also makes sense.
Yet, I found the book frustrating at times with such a deep flaw running through it that I cannot give the book more than three stars. Basically, there's a major contradiction between what the book claims and what it delivers.
The whole tone of this book, particularly the front and back covers, with the word 'algorithm' used three times on the back, the (meaningless) equations on the front and words such as engineer, solve, and Google, is designed to give the impression that this is a rigorous, bolt and braces, book that will lead to happiness. It isn't.
Rather than being an algorithm as claimed, the book is a set of chapters discussing different principles that affect our happiness with some (often very good) suggestions at the end of each chapter. The happiness equation is not an equation but written as an inequality and is in fact a statement - 'if your perceptions of an event are at least as good as your expectations, then you'll feel happy'. Fair enough, but it begs the question what the oft repeated phrase 'solve the happiness equation' actually means. And is it just me, but are the scales the wrong way round?
Basically the author is rigorous when it suits him. Having minutely dissected what we are (are we our brain, our body, our thoughts, etc?), which was one of the strongest parts of the book, he'll then throw a sloppy unquantified statement such as 'life' 'nudging' JK Rowling in a particular direction so that she wrote her books. This pattern persists through the book, culminating in a chapter where he tries to prove that the universe is designed rather than random (a view that I'm not unsympathetic to). First, he's on shaky ground by trying to prove that something is very likely to be true (something my maths tutors at university would not have been impressed with!) and then by making a very convoluted argument involving the tiny probabilities of genetic mutations. Even with my very limited knowledge of the subject, it just seemed to be wrong, and having a niece with a severe and not particularly rare genetic disorder born from two healthy parents, his argument just did not ring true - I'd love to hear what someone with a background in genetics thought of the chapter.
With this highly selective use of rigour, I felt the author was trying to have his coffee and drink it (to adapt the common saying to his love of coffee), and someone of his high intelligence and level of education would have been aware of this falsehood running through the book.
I feel rather harsh for having been so critical of a such a well-meaning book with a lot of good advice in it. In fact I would recommend this book to people seeking to increase their happiness levels, particularly young people (older people who've been through the mill may find the chapter on blind spots to be teaching their grandmother to suck eggs), but the exaggerated claims of the book's scientifc approach really did rankle with me.
My atheism was earned the hard way and I must point out that I see atheism as a very positive discovery for me to have made. It brings me exactly the same happiness as his god offers him. I have had very similar experiences to his but have come to the opposite conclusion. I respect his experience and his point of view but it is just that – a point of view. It is not based on solid science.
Although this book may not be a panacea for everyone, Mo's refreshing and honest account is a brilliant building block. He encourages us to take what is useful from his concepts and make it our own - solving for our own happiness.
Mo's book is highly relatable to all. For those at their lowest points - coping with bereavement, illness or significant loss, right through to the those who are at the top of their game, yet still not finding themselves happy. Mo provides readers with simple, practical suggestions that anyone can incorporate into their daily life - to help us all transition towards a happier and more peaceful existence.
A must-read!! I will be recommending this book to all family members, colleagues and friends.
Too many reasons to recommend this but you’ll discover your own after you read it.
Read it.
There is the usual (small) clutch of negative reviews "Didn't do nuffin for me", "no math in this book, this geeza is supposedly a boffin", ... To those posters I say "Go back into your little negative corner, and carry on sulking. Or read the book again and see how well your behaviour is described (and counteracted)". For the rest of us, read this remarkable book! Clear, easy, concise, articulate, well put together. And with a message that we all need to hear.







