This image is the cover for the book No One Succeeds Alone

No One Succeeds Alone

The inspirational story of Compass CEO Robert Reffkin, who shares valuable lessons that you can put into action today to improve your quality of life.

No one expected a dreadlocked fifteen-year-old who cared more about his DJ business than his homework to grow up to become one of the youngest-ever White House fellows, create multiple nonprofits, and found a multibillion-dollar company. But Robert Reffkin—raised by an Israeli immigrant single mother, disowned by his maternal grandparents for being Black, and abandoned by his father—has always defied the odds.

Compass’s mission is to help everyone find their place in the world, and in these pages, Reffkin distills the wisdom he’s gathered along his journey. Each chapter offers a part of his life story and a practical lesson, such as:

Love your customers more than your ideasFind someone to give you the critical feedback others won’tCreate your own “rich-kid’s network”

The advice in No One Succeeds Alone will inspire you to dream bigger than you ever have before, realize your full potential, and give back by helping make someone else’s dreams come true, too. All author proceeds from No One Succeeds Alone are being donated to nonprofits that help young people realize their dreams.

“To understand Robert's journey is to understand the American dream . . . You will be moved and inspired by these words and will leave with an energy to inspire change in your life and the lives of others.” —Wes Moore, CEO, Robin Hood Foundation; New York Times–bestselling author

Robert Reffkin

ROBERT REFFKIN is a husband, a father, and the founder and CEO of Compass, a real estate technology company that is now the largest independent brokerage in America, having helped clients buy and sell homes worth more than a quarter-trillion dollars since its founding. Reffkin graduated from Columbia in two and a half years, earned an MBA from Columbia Business School, and worked at McKinsey, Lazard, and Goldman Sachs. He ran fifty marathons, one in each US state, to raise $1 million for charities— including America Needs You, the nonprofit he founded to serve young people living below the poverty line who are the first in their families to go to college.

Houghton Mifflin Harcourt (hmhbooks.com)