Ruchika T. Malhotra is the founder of Candour, a global inclusion strategy firm that has worked with some of the world's biggest organizations. A former business journalist, she is now a regular contributor to Harvard Business Review. Her writing has appeared in The New York Times, Forbes, Bloomberg, The Seattle Times, and more. She has held adjunct faculty positions at the University of Washington and Seattle University and is the author of Inclusion on Purpose- An Intersectional Approach to Creating a Culture of Belonging at Work, MIT Press's top-selling book of 2022.
“Capitalism would have you believe that success is only measured by how well you compete against those around you, even though many of us marginalized by these same systems have survived for generations only through collaboration and connectedness. With Uncompete, Malhotra helps us reconnect to our communities and ourselves so that we can build better and more sustainable visions of success, together.” —Ijeoma Oluo, New York Times bestselling author of So You Want to Talk About Race “Uncompete will fundamentally shift how we think about success and collaboration. Ruchika Malhotra has given the world an extraordinary gift—a research-backed framework that replaces toxic competition with genuine collective success. This isn’t just a book; it’s the beginning of a movement that will transform how we work and succeed together.” —Amy Gallo, author of Getting Along “Uncompete is a powerful and deeply resonant manifesto for those of us who are exhausted by hustle culture and disillusioned by the myth that competition is the only path to success. Malhotra dismantles that myth and offers us something far more transformative: a vision of work rooted in collaboration, abundance, and belonging. It’s not just timely—it’s essential reading for anyone ready to reimagine and build a better way forward.” —Uché Blackstock, MD, New York Times bestselling author of Legacy “Uncompete exposes the explicit and unspoken rules that keep us stuck in cycles of comparison, scarcity, and silent competition and offers a bold new model for business and personal leadership. This is more than a book. It’s a call to action asking each of us to reimagine what success can look like when we stop playing by outdated scripts.” —Deepa Purushothaman, author of The First, the Few, the Only “Uncompete names what so many of us feel but rarely say aloud: that constant competition isn’t making us better—it’s actually making us sick. Uncompete is a powerful call to reimagine success as something we do with each other, not against each other.” —Pooja Lakshmin, MD, author of Real Self-Care