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In Design Love In: How to Unleash the Most Powerful Force in Business, Marcus Buckingham argues that love—not engagement, satisfaction, or motivation—is the only feeling that reliably changes the behavior of employees and customers, and that it can be deliberately designed into business.
Buckingham is one of the world’s foremost researchers on human performance. He is a former senior vice president at Gallup turned New York Times–best-selling author, having written First, Break All the Rules. In his new book, he draws on decades of research to show that the relationship between experiences and outcomes is not linear—only experiences so positive that people describe them as “love” actually drive loyalty, productivity, and advocacy.
In his conversation with Adam Job, senior director at the BCG Henderson Institute, he discusses why love is categorically different from engagement, the five feelings that make up a loving experience, three disciplines leaders can use to design love into their organizations, and why common practices like outsourcing and large spans of control are fundamentally unloving.
Key topics discussed:
01:16 | Why love is categorically different from engagement or satisfaction
04:43 | The nonlinear relationship between experiences and outcomes
08:24 | How experiences drive behaviors that drive outcomes
12:34 | Designing love in: the five feelings and three disciplines
16:00 | Can love be designed into products, not just experiences?
19:13 | The three disciplines: walk the stage, equip the people, sequence the scenes
27:39 | Spans of control and the one-to-12 rule
30:17 | The limits of artificial experience–making
Additional inspirations from Marcus Buckingham:
By BCG Henderson Institute4.7
3434 ratings
In Design Love In: How to Unleash the Most Powerful Force in Business, Marcus Buckingham argues that love—not engagement, satisfaction, or motivation—is the only feeling that reliably changes the behavior of employees and customers, and that it can be deliberately designed into business.
Buckingham is one of the world’s foremost researchers on human performance. He is a former senior vice president at Gallup turned New York Times–best-selling author, having written First, Break All the Rules. In his new book, he draws on decades of research to show that the relationship between experiences and outcomes is not linear—only experiences so positive that people describe them as “love” actually drive loyalty, productivity, and advocacy.
In his conversation with Adam Job, senior director at the BCG Henderson Institute, he discusses why love is categorically different from engagement, the five feelings that make up a loving experience, three disciplines leaders can use to design love into their organizations, and why common practices like outsourcing and large spans of control are fundamentally unloving.
Key topics discussed:
01:16 | Why love is categorically different from engagement or satisfaction
04:43 | The nonlinear relationship between experiences and outcomes
08:24 | How experiences drive behaviors that drive outcomes
12:34 | Designing love in: the five feelings and three disciplines
16:00 | Can love be designed into products, not just experiences?
19:13 | The three disciplines: walk the stage, equip the people, sequence the scenes
27:39 | Spans of control and the one-to-12 rule
30:17 | The limits of artificial experience–making
Additional inspirations from Marcus Buckingham:

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