Where to Start with Ed Catmull
Ed Catmull spent his career solving one of the hardest problems in business: how to sustain creativity at scale. As co-founder of Pixar Animation Studios alongside Steve Jobs and John Lasseter, he built a company that produced hit after hit for decades, from Toy Story to Inside Out, without ever becoming formulaic. His achievement was not just artistic but organizational. He designed the systems, feedback loops, and cultural norms that allowed hundreds of creative people to collaborate without crushing each other’s ideas. After Pixar merged with Disney, he applied the same principles to turn around Walt Disney Animation Studios. His one book distills everything he learned into a guide that applies far beyond Hollywood.
Start here
Creativity, Inc.: Overcoming the Unseen Forces That Stand in the Way of True Inspiration
Ed Catmull · 368 pages · 2014 · Easy
Themes: creative leadership, organizational culture, feedback systems, Pixar, managing creative teams
Catmull’s only book, and one of the best business books of the past decade. Creativity, Inc. tells the story of how Pixar built and maintained a culture where creativity thrives, from the early days of computer animation through the Disney acquisition. It is part memoir, part management manual, and entirely honest about how hard it is to protect creative work from the forces that want to make it safe and predictable.
Why Start Here
This is Catmull’s only book, so the question is really whether to read it at all. The answer is an emphatic yes. The book introduces ideas that have become standard vocabulary in creative organizations: the Braintrust (where peers give candid feedback without authority), the principle that every movie starts out terrible, and the insight that fear of failure is the greatest enemy of creative work.
What makes the book special is Catmull’s willingness to describe his own blind spots. He writes about times when Pixar’s culture was breaking down and he did not see it, when hierarchy silently crushed dissent, and when the merger with Disney forced him to confront assumptions he had never questioned. These moments of failure teach more than the success stories.
What to Expect
A warm, engaging narrative that moves between personal memoir and leadership philosophy. Catmull writes with humility and clarity. The Pixar stories are fascinating on their own, but the management insights are what make it essential. Accessible to anyone interested in how organizations can sustain creative excellence.