Start with why: The Golden Circle that shapes leaders and achievers

OpinionLifestyle
24 Jun 2026 • 7:56 AM MYT
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The Golden Circle and brain illustration of Simon Sinek has 3 elements starting with Why question. Diagram vector presentation inform the origin of human performance or behavior of user target goal

How Simon Sinek’s timeless idea can turn a civil services aspirant into a purpose-driven, unstoppable force

In a world that celebrates results, Simon Sinek’s Golden Circle Theory dares to ask a deeper question: Why do you do what you do? His model isn’t just a theory — it’s a mirror that reflects our motivation, discipline and the real reason we wake up every morning. Whether it’s a CEO leading a company or a student preparing for India’s toughest exam, the Golden Circle helps us find clarity, direction and lasting inspiration.

At its core, the Golden Circle has three layers — Why, How and What.

  • The outer circle, “What,” represents what we do — our actions, goals or tangible results
  • The middle circle, “How,” shows how we do it — the methods, discipline or values that define our path
  • The innermost circle, “Why,” is the soul — the purpose, belief or cause that drives us

Sinek argues that most people and organisations move from outside-in — they focus on what they want and how they’ll get it. But the truly great — from Martin Luther King Jr. to Steve Jobs — start from the inside-out. They begin with why. When you know why you exist, your actions gain clarity, your methods gain consistency and your leadership gains authenticity.

Why it matters in daily life and leadership

Understanding your ‘why’ transforms ordinary leadership into something magnetic. Leaders who start with why don’t just manage people — they inspire them. They don’t push through pressure; they pull others toward a shared purpose. The same rule applies to daily life. When you know your deeper motivation, your routine stops being mechanical and starts being meaningful.

Imagine two students preparing for exams. One studies because “he has to”. The other studies because he believes education can help him serve and uplift others. Who do you think will last longer in the fight? The one with purpose.

Purpose isn’t just fuel for ambition; it’s armour against burnout. It steadies you when results waver, when competition feels crushing or when failure knocks on your door.

Applying it to a Civil Services aspirant

Let’s apply this to an aspirant preparing for the Civil Services Examination — one of the most demanding tests in India.

The What: Becoming an IAS, IPS or IFS officer

The How: Studying long hours, following a strict routine, analysing current affairs, writing mock tests and building discipline

The Why: This is the heart of it — perhaps it’s the dream of transforming governance, bringing justice or uplifting rural communities

When the why is strong, how and what automatically fall in line. A student who knows why he wants to serve won’t be shaken by one failed attempt. His goal becomes bigger than marks or ranks — it becomes a mission. That sense of purpose turns ordinary preparation into a sacred pursuit.

Every time fatigue hits, he doesn’t just think, “I need to study”. He reminds himself, “This is how I’ll make India fairer, cleaner, stronger.” That shift — from task to purpose — is where greatness begins.

Self-discovery and motivation through the Golden Circle

The Golden Circle helps students self-discover by forcing them to ask honest questions:

  • Why did I choose this path?
  • What kind of impact do I want to create?
  • How can my daily actions reflect my deeper purpose?

When a student answers these, motivation stops being borrowed — it becomes self-generated. He no longer needs external validation because his why fuels him from within. That’s the mark of a future leader.

For a civil services aspirant, starting with why means realising that the exam is not the destination — it’s the gateway. The true goal is not power or prestige but service. And once this realisation settles in, every failure becomes feedback, every struggle becomes strength and every success becomes a responsibility.

In essence, Simon Sinek’s Golden Circle teaches one timeless truth:

People who know their “why” never lose their way.

So, to every aspirant burning the midnight oil — pause for a moment. Ask yourself not just what you want to become, but why you want it. Because when your purpose leads your journey, success doesn’t just follow — it stays.

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