Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Outliers Book divulge - Stories of Success








Malcolm Gladwell's quality to take the somewhat obscure patterns of daily life and bring attentiveness to them in easy to understand language is his true power as a writer and unmistakably as a researcher.

The book Tipping Point (Time Warner Book Group, 2000, 2002), Gladwell explains how ideas, trends or social activities become phenomena's with just an unseen force that he called the tipping point. In Blink (Time Warner Book Group, 2005), he explores how and why decisions are made in the blink of an eye.

With his new book, Outliers The Story of Success (Little Brown and Company, 2008), Gladwell has industrialized a principles for why some citizen are more prosperous than others. In his research, he found patterns of family history, birthdates, birthplace, and culture contribute to a person's success.

Outliers Book divulge - Stories of Success

While in his first two books he took relatively uncomplicated concepts and gave them shape, form and force, in Outliers, the book starts out very strong but in the end not all of the investigate seems to support his theories.

Social Class Makes a distinction in Success

The name of the book is defined in the very first paragraph. Gladwell wrote that an outlier is,"1: something that is situated away from or classified differently from a main or related body 2: a statistical observation that is markedly separate in value from others in the sample".

He uses the remainder of the book to information how patterns can be found when comparing individuals in clear groups. Some of the patterns included:

Most prosperous hockey players are born in the month of January.

After researching athletes, musicians and others, investigate shows it takes 10,000 hours of practice to become an expert.

Successful technology giants like Bill Gates, Steve Jobs and Paul Allen, were born in the middle of the years of 1953 and 1955.

The "honor culture" experienced throughout the southern states, especially in the Appalachians, was born out of the 'Scotch-Irish' decedents who settled in those areas.

Children who were raised in upper and upper middle classes were more prosperous in their adult lives than those raised in lower and lower middle class families because of a sense of entitlement.

The Chinese culture can understand math faster and good than other cultures because of working long hours 360 days a year with rice paddies. And, Chinese children learn to count earlier in life because Chinese number words are shorter and easier to repeat than English number words.

A Pattern of Success for Gladwell

While the installation of this book is not as substantiated by the investigate (I'm still not sure how rice paddies enumerate to being good at math) as Gladwell's old books, some of the investigate such as the 10,000 to devotee a skill makes excellent sense.

Gladwell's storytelling is what makes Outliers worth the read.

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