Burn the Boats: Toss Plan B Overboard and Unleash Your Full Potential
Burn the Boats explores the transformative power of eliminating safety nets. Entrepreneur Matt Higgins demonstrates how total commitment and trusting one's intuition can turn perceived risks into a definitive path to extraordinary success.

Table of Content
1. Introduction
2 min 02 sec
Imagine standing on the shoreline of a distant, unfamiliar land. Behind you lies the vast ocean you just crossed; before you stands an intimidating challenge that seems almost impossible to overcome. In this moment of extreme tension, the natural human instinct is to look back at the ships anchored in the harbor. Those ships represent safety, comfort, and the ability to escape if things go poorly. But history tells us that the leaders who truly change the world are the ones who turn around and set those ships on fire. They eliminate the option of retreat, leaving themselves with only two choices: to move forward or to fail. This is the essence of burning the boats, a mindset that transforms fear into an unstoppable fuel for progress.
In this summary, we explore the life and philosophy of Matt Higgins, a man who built a spectacular career by repeatedly torching his own safety nets. Long before he was a celebrated venture capitalist or a familiar face on national television, Higgins was a teenager trapped in a cycle of poverty in New York. He lived in a small, crowded apartment with his mother, constantly worrying about where their next meal would come from. For most people in that situation, the logical path would be to seek out the most secure, stable job possible. But Higgins understood something different. He realized that the greatest risk wasn’t in taking a leap, but in staying where he was.
By examining his journey and the experiences of other high-achievers, we will uncover why having a Plan B is often the very thing that sabotages Plan A. We will look at how to distinguish between reckless gambles and calculated risks, and why trusting your own inner voice is more important than following the established rules of the professional world. This is not just about business success; it is about the psychological liberation that comes when you stop hedging your bets and start living with total, uncompromising commitment. Get ready to discover why the most secure path to your dreams is the one with no way back.
2. The Hidden Cost of the Safety Net
2 min 17 sec
Discover why having a backup plan might be the primary reason you aren’t reaching your goals, as we examine the psychological trap of security and the power of total commitment.
3. Trusting Intuition Over Convention
2 min 20 sec
Learn to identify the moments when your gut instinct is a more reliable guide than the advice of experts or the safety of traditional career paths.
4. Harnessing Fear as a Tool for Resilience
2 min 19 sec
Explore why the presence of anxiety is not a sign of weakness, but a biological indicator that you are on the verge of a significant breakthrough.
5. The Art of Perpetual Reinvention
2 min 03 sec
Understand why burning the boats is not a one-time event, but a continuous practice that prevents stagnation and ensures long-term growth.
6. Leveraging Momentum for the Next Leap
1 min 46 sec
Discover how to turn every victory into a stepping stone for future growth, ensuring that your previous successes never become an anchor.
7. Conclusion
1 min 21 sec
The journey from a small, resource-depleted apartment in Queens to the high-stakes boardrooms of venture capital is not just a story of hard work; it is a story of a specific kind of courage. It is the courage to decide that the status quo is more dangerous than the unknown. Matt Higgins’ philosophy reminds us that our greatest strengths are often hidden behind our greatest fears. When we finally decide to burn the boats, we aren’t just destroying our ability to retreat; we are creating the conditions for our own transformation. We are telling ourselves, and the world, that we believe so deeply in our vision that we no longer need a backup plan.
As you move forward from this summary, take a look at the ‘boats’ in your own life. What are the safety nets that are preventing you from going all-in? What is the Plan B that is draining your focus and giving you an excuse to play small? Remember that the perfect time to act is a mirage. The feeling of readiness is often just a mask for the fear of failure. True growth happens when you trust your intuition, embrace the inevitable crises, and treat every success as a platform for the next leap. It’s time to stop looking back at the shore and start focusing on the horizon. The path to your extraordinary potential is waiting, but you’ll only find it once you strike the match and let the old ways burn. Go forward with total commitment, and you will find that you are capable of far more than you ever imagined.
About this book
What is this book about?
Burn the Boats explores the unconventional philosophy that the greatest obstacle to success is often the presence of a backup plan. Drawing from historical military strategies and the author’s personal rise from a difficult upbringing to the heights of venture capital, the narrative argues that safety nets actually diminish our focus and resolve. By examining why we cling to security, the book provides a roadmap for identifying one's true calling and pursuing it with an all-in mentality. The promise of this work is a psychological shift. It offers listeners the tools to recognize when incremental progress is actually a form of stagnation and how to reframe crisis as a catalyst for growth. Through stories of high-stakes investments, career pivots, and public challenges, the book illustrates that true potential is only unlocked when the option to retreat is completely removed. It is a guide for anyone looking to break free from the limitations of conventional wisdom and build a life defined by bold, intentional action.
Book Information
About the Author
Matt Higgins
Matt Higgins is a prominent business leader who co-founded RSE Ventures, a multi-billion dollar private investment firm. He has shared his expertise with a national audience as a guest investor on the television program Shark Tank. Throughout his diverse career, Higgins has also served as a top-level executive for major sports franchises, including the New York Jets and the Miami Dolphins.
Ratings & Reviews
Ratings at a glance
What people think
Listeners regard this work as a vital resource for entrepreneurs, packed with helpful life lessons and actionable tips on every page. Beyond the practical advice, they value the author's narrative approach—specifically his amazing life story and his determination to confront challenges without letting fear manage his decisions. The style is deliberately brief and highly relatable, with one listener highlighting how it leads with kindness and empathy.
Top reviews
Picked this up after seeing Matt on Shark Tank and was genuinely surprised by how much heart is in these pages. This isn't your typical dry business manual because it leads with vulnerability and a raw look at what it means to be truly desperate. Truth is, the story of him dropping out of high school at sixteen to buy groceries for his mother is more moving than any executive success story I’ve read recently. He explains how he used that initial 'burn the boats' moment to propel himself into becoming the youngest press secretary in New York history. The writing style is punchy, fast-paced, and filled with a sense of urgency that makes you want to go out and tackle your biggest fears immediately. While the idea of having no Plan B is terrifying to most, Higgins makes a compelling case for why a safety net actually holds us back from our full potential. It’s an emotional rollercoaster that provides actual, tactical advice on managing anxiety. I finished it in two days and I'm already rethinking my current career trajectory.
Show moreThe chapter on turning anxiety into a superpower hit me exactly where I needed it most. I’ve always struggled with that 'frozen' feeling before a big presentation or a risky move. Hearing Matt describe how he froze on the Shark Tank set, only to talk himself through it using his own history of resilience, was incredibly humanizing. It makes the success feel attainable. The book is chock-full of actionable strategies that aren't just fluff; he really digs into the research about why having a backup plan reduces your probability of success. Not gonna lie, I was skeptical of another VC writing a book, but Higgins leads with empathy and kindness. He honors his mother’s memory in a way that gives the business advice a much deeper meaning. This is a must-read for anyone who is tired of the 'incremental growth' trap and wants to make a massive leap. Just grab your matches and go for it!
Show moreWhat Matt Higgins has done here is package a lifetime of grit into a manual for the rest of us. It took him 48 years to live this book, and you can feel that weight in every chapter. Most business books feel like they were ghostwritten by someone who has never missed a meal, but Matt’s stories of hunger and poverty in Queens give him real credibility. I found the 'self-talk' techniques he used during his first Shark Tank deal to be genuinely transformative. The truth is, we all have that inner voice telling us we aren’t good enough. Higgins shows you how to shut that voice up by leaning into the crisis rather than running from it. The prose is sharp and the sentence lengths vary enough to keep the energy high throughout the entire read. It’s not just about business; it’s about owning your journey and refusing to stagnate. This is easily the best motivational book I’ve picked up this year.
Show moreThis book isn't just for business owners; it’s for anyone who feels like they’re playing it too safe in life. Ever since I finished it, I’ve been thinking about my own 'boats' and which ones I need to burn to finally get serious about my goals. The stories of Jesse Derris and Sarah Cooper provide a rare insight into the psyche of people who actually take the leap. Matt’s own story is the heartbeat of the book, though. From a McDonald's job to a Harvard professor—it’s the ultimate underdog story. The lesson is simple: a crisis forces you to act. If you always have a Plan B, you’ll never give Plan A the 100% effort it requires to succeed. The writing is relatable, leads with kindness, and offers a refreshing perspective on risk. I’ve already recommended this to three friends who are currently 'stagnating' in their careers. Grab your matches and start burning!
Show moreFinally got around to reading this because I’ve been feeling stuck in my corporate job lately. I found the central thesis—that we perform better when retreat isn’t an option—to be incredibly challenging in the best way possible. Frankly, I’ve always been a 'Plan B' person, so reading about Jesse Derris and Sarah Cooper taking massive leaps was a bit of a wake-up call for my own stagnant habits. To be fair, some of the advice feels a bit aggressive, and I’m not sure I’m ready to quit my job tomorrow without a backup, but the psychology behind why we sabotage our own 'Plan A' is fascinating. The chapter on corporate saboteurs was particularly relatable; I’ve definitely dealt with those 'Withholders' in my own office. My only minor gripe is that some of the historical comparisons, like Caesar, feel a bit repetitive if you’ve read a lot of leadership books. Still, the personal grit Matt shows throughout his life makes the advice feel earned rather than preached.
Show moreEver wonder why some people just seem to 'make it' while others stall out at the first sign of trouble? This book explores that gap by looking at the psychological safety nets we build for ourselves. Matt Higgins argues that these nets are actually cages. I loved the breakdown of how he navigated the 9/11 aftermath and the rebuilding of Ground Zero. It showed that 'burning the boats' isn't just a one-time thing; it's a muscle you have to build. Gotta say, the section on 'incrementalism' was a bit of a gut punch for me. I’ve spent years climbing rungs on a ladder I don't even like. While I think some of the case studies are a little too focused on extreme wealth, the underlying lessons about self-trust are universal. It’s a quick read, very engaging, and doesn't waste much time on filler. Definitely worth the time if you're looking for a push to finally pursue your true calling.
Show moreAfter hearing Matt speak on a podcast, I expected a standard business book, but this is much more vulnerable than that. He shares painful details about his mother's health, his own battle with cancer, and the crushing weight of poverty. These aren't just anecdotes; they are the foundation for his belief that we are more capable than we think when our backs are against the wall. The book is thoughtfully concise, which I love. It doesn't ramble. I particularly liked the '5 types of corporate saboteurs'—it helped me identify why I’ve been feeling so drained at my current firm. Frankly, the advice to 'chase the fear' is exactly what I needed to hear this month. My only critique is that the ending feels a little rushed, but the core message stays with you long after you close the cover. It’s a solid 4-star read for anyone needing a perspective shift.
Show moreAs someone who has been an entrepreneur for a decade, I found some of the advice here a bit too reckless for my taste. Look, the storytelling is top-notch and Matt's personal journey from poverty in Queens to a Harvard professor is undeniably inspiring. However, I worry that the 'burn the boats' mentality relies heavily on hindsight bias. We only hear from the people whose boats were burned and who happened to reach the shore; we don't hear from those who drowned. In my experience, a calculated risk is usually better than an all-or-nothing gamble. The book is well-written and the sections on turning anxiety into a 'superpower' are quite helpful for high-functioning professionals. I just think the core message needs a disclaimer: this isn't for everyone. If you have a family and zero savings, burning your only source of income might not be the 'breakthrough' move you need. It’s a great motivational read, but take the specific tactics with a grain of salt.
Show moreTo be fair, the writing style is incredibly engaging and fast-paced, but I'm not convinced 'no safety net' is a one-size-fits-all strategy. The book is a bit all over the place, going a mile wide and an inch deep on too many different people's stories. One minute we're talking about Sun Tzu, and the next it's Scarlett Johansson. While the stories are interesting, they sometimes feel cherry-picked to support a very specific thesis that might not apply to the average person. Personally, I found the parts about Matt’s own life—his time with Giuliani and the Jets—to be much more compelling than the general advice. The book is quite short, which I appreciated, but it did feel a bit like a series of blog posts stitched together. If you need a quick jolt of inspiration, it’s great. If you’re looking for a deep, nuanced dive into risk management, you might find it a bit shallow.
Show moreNot what I expected given the high ratings, as much of the book relies on hindsight bias to justify reckless decisions. I found the advice to be quite shallow and, at times, it felt like a case study in toxic productivity. Telling people to fail every class spectacularly just to force themselves into a GED program is a very specific type of gamble that could easily ruin a young person's life. Look, I get that it worked for Matt, but presenting it as a universal blueprint for success feels irresponsible. The 'facts' seem loosely supported by stories that don't always connect to the main point. It felt a lot like a collection of LinkedIn 'hustle culture' posts expanded into a book. To be fair, the writing is clear, but I found the content to be more clickbait-y than practical. I left it in the seat pocket of my flight because I couldn't see myself ever needing to reference it again.
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