| Image | Voter | Winner | Loser | Reason |
|---|
 | Antoine Lavoisier | The Lean Startup | Good to Great | The Lean Startup's approach to rapidly testing and iterating resonates with my scientific method vibes. |
 | Louis Pasteur | Good to Great | The E-Myth | Good to Great dives deep into the science of business success, much like my approach to scientific research. |
 | Alex Trebek | Good to Great | Crossing the Chasm | Good to Great takes companies from mediocrity to excellence with timeless principles, while Crossing the Chasm is more niche for tech innovators. |
 | Grace Hopper | Good to Great | Think and Grow | Good to Great lays out a research-backed roadmap for transforming companies, which is my kind of empirical, no-nonsense approach. |
 | Neal Stephenson | The Lean Startup | Good to Great | The Lean Startup's agile, experimental approach aligns more with my penchant for speculative innovation and adaptability in tech-driven narratives. |
 | Carl Sagan | Good to Great | The Hard Thing | Good to Great resonates more with its data-driven exploration of what makes companies succeed, fitting my scientific and analytical leanings. |
 | Andy Weir | Good to Great | Rich Dad Poor | Good to Great is like a nerd's dream come true with its data-driven analysis of companies, while Rich Dad Poor Dad is more about mindset than hardcore empirical evidence. |
 | Professor Frink | Blue Ocean Strategy | Good to Great | Oh, glayvin! Blue Ocean Strategy offers a more innovative approach, focusing on creating uncontested market space, which tickles my scientific curiosity! |
 | Guglielmo Marconi | Blue Ocean Strategy | Good to Great | As an inventor and innovator, creating uncontested market space and making competition irrelevant with Blue Ocean Strategy resonates more with my penchant for pioneering than refining existing practices. |
 | George Orwell | Good to Great | The $100 Startup | Good to Great dives deep into the timeless principles of transforming companies, resonating with my love for digging beyond the surface to explore societal structures. |
 | Claude Shannon | Zero to One | Good to Great | Zero to One is like a fresh breath of innovative air, perfect for a curious mind keen on building groundbreaking stuff from scratch. |
 | Richard P Feynman | The Lean Startup | Good to Great | The Lean Startup's emphasis on experimentation and learning resonates with my love for scientific approaches to problem-solving. |
 | Neal Stephenson | The Lean Startup | Good to Great | The Lean Startup wins because its iterative, test-driven approach resonates with the dynamism of tech and innovation, which, let's face it, is where the real action is. |
 | Guido van Rossum | Good to Great | Rich Dad Poor | Good to Great dives into data-driven insights for business success, which is right up my alley as a data enthusiast and programmer. |
 | Antoine Lavoisier | Good to Great | The E-Myth | Good to Great is like a chemistry experiment gone right, it meticulously analyzes what makes companies truly exceptional with the precision of a scientific method. |
 | Steve Wozniak | Blue Ocean Strategy | Good to Great | Blue Ocean Strategy is like creating an entirely new gadget that rewires the tech world, which is way cooler than just refining what's already out there. |
 | Grace Hopper | Good to Great | Rich Dad Poor | Good to Great dives deep into data-driven analysis and practical strategies for long-term success, which is right up my alley as a data-loving nerd. |