Bruce’s journey from boardrooms to bestsellers reveals how turning scarcity into innovation revolutionizes leadership and profitability.” Mia Funk, founder of the Creative Process, Podcaster, and Artist.
In today’s world, the true essence of leadership and individuality often gets buried under the delusion of self-interest and hostility. Amidst this delusive world of personal gain, Bruce Piasecki exemplifies purpose-driven leadership, inspiring leaders to lead in the Franklin Way.
“In this smaller world, we must all become like Ben Franklin — frugal, inventive, diplomatic.” — Bruce Piasecki.
Bruce’s purpose goes beyond business ventures, establishing a legacy of valuable literature through books written over three decades. As a speaker, advisor, and educator, he guides large corporations on sustainability, governance, and innovation, including Fortune 500 companies like BP and Merck. Excelling in competitive frugality and artful innovation as catalysts for societal progress, Bruce’s journey is marked by the power of writing.
Apart from being the founders of two entrepreneurial ventures, AHC Group Inc. and the Creative Force Foundation, Bruce authored over 26 books that have reshaped people’s perspectives and transformed lives.
While defining success, Bruce pens, “Success, to me, is the ability to write something that holds social value for the next five years. But I also believe in pausing, resisting deadlines, and knowing when to say, ‘I have enough.’’’
Bruce transitioned from a professor to a value-driven entrepreneur, consistently striking a balance between strategic thinking and real-world actions. Like Professor Serge Frontier, Bruce’s legacy moves beyond academics, making him a beacon of inspiration as a systemic thinker.
Doing More with Less, The Ben Franklin Way
As a legendary leader carving his own unique path of success, Bruce Piasecki, in his memoir “Doing More With Less,” has encouraged leaders to follow the leadership principles of Ben Franklin. This book stands as a paradigm of leadership and societal change, with Bruce highlighting six leadership principles: trust is currency, partnerships over isolation, innovation through constraint, efficiency with purpose, resilience through adaptation, and storytelling as strategy. Piasecki considers policy or mandates, corporate strategy, technology, and capital markets as the Elephant of Social Change, driving transformations in today’s competitive world.
A Sneak-Peak into Bruce’s Latest Five Bestselling Books
Doing More with One Life
One of 2024’s best-selling books, Bruce Piasecki’s memoir “Doing More with One Life” connects with readers as he shares his deep love and respect for his family, especially his parents. Growing up in poverty and trauma, Bruce developed an early habit of reading writers who strengthened his writing and fed his creative hunger, which led him to become a writer himself.
Wealth and Climate Competitiveness
In “Wealth and Climate Competitiveness: The New Narrative on Business and Society”, published on January 30, 2024, Bruce addressed some of the pressing issues of the 21st century, including racial inequality, greater inclusiveness of diverse people, and white supremacy movements. It also put forth the role of innovation and wealth in addressing climate crises. Bruce argued about a set of five recurring prejudices that have impeded progress on climate action in this book.
A New Way to Wealth
Doing more with less is the path to success, as Piasecki believes. Through “A New Way to Wealth,” Piasecki necessitates the need for a new reign of social purpose, public-mindedness, and restraint in capitalism. In this book, he paid homage to great financial leaders, helping people understand the responsible use of wealth.
2040 A FABLE
Bruce’s “2040 A Fable” takes readers forward into the near future, a world weathered by climate storms, the constant surveillance of event police, and years of The Virus. It sheds light on the digital world, where social media and technology have evolved into scorecards and values are judged and can be rewritten.
Giants of Social Investing: John Streur and Jack Robinson
The book explains how new world investors and companies are outrunning the past. It sheds light on the transformation of large organizations, including Tesla, Apple, Unilever, and others, along with ESG investment grade changes. Based on case studies, this book also highlights principles of attracting new capital for top corporate firms.
Honored Social Impacts
Bruce received Worth Magazine’s Worthy 100 Award in 2025, alongside Lionel Messi and Jane Fonda. However, his accolades could not divert his focus from business, values, and societal contribution. Balancing two successful careers can be daunting, but for Bruce, it’s driven by a desire to make a difference and a commitment to social impact.
Crafting a Life’s Story
Bruce profoundly writes, “My daily love of writing can be considered a personal hobby.” On August 21, 2025, I journaled, “Waking to write, each morning near dawn, I am greeted by hummingbirds fed by my vigilant wife, Andrea Carol Masters. These colorful hummers are, like in my business life, to follow each day, met with a range of more aggressive crows, hawks, and pigeons. I have learned to accept both the positive and negative aspects, embodying both stoicism, like Marcus the Roman Emperor, and pragmatism, like Benjamin Franklin. Some hours are pure inspiration, some fumble, and most are ways to earn a living.“
“In the initial phase of my writing career, I aspired to please and contract with these prominent publishers—and I successfully achieved this by publishing books, offprints, and numerous editions at Simon and Schuster, Wiley, and the Los Angeles Times Syndicate. However, now, as I wake each morning, I feel a greater sense of freedom and creativity in my decision to bypass commercial publishing opportunities and pursue my writing endeavors independently.”
A Candid Conversation with Ed Saltzberg
While attending a webinar conducted by Ed Saltzberg on his The Security and Sustainability Forum on September 17, 2025, Bruce emphasized having disciplined teams and making purposeful choices to outperform larger organizations that are chasing growth at any cost. For sustainability officers, his advice was to lead from the middle, ask questions that open minds, and focus on small wins that build momentum over time.