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Marketing & Sales13 min read
The Tipping Point
by Malcolm Gladwell
How Little Things Can Make a Big Difference
Published: October 16, 2012
4.2 (588 ratings)
Table of Contents
1
ideas spread like epidemics.2
it is only an epidemic once the tipping point threshold has been crossed.3
a certain few key people are often the cause of epidemics.4
ideas spread particularly fast with connectors, or people with a vast social network.5
some people are born with the gift of persuasion and a knack for selling ideas.6
in every network there are mavens who amass information and pass it on to others.7
an idea has to stick before it can spread.8
external circumstances have a much greater influence on our behavior than we think.9
even the smallest changes in a context can determine whether an epidemic takes off.10
final summaryBook Summary
This is a comprehensive summary of “The Tipping Point” by Malcolm Gladwell. The book explores how little things can make a big difference.
ideas spread like epidemics.#
Introduction
malcolm gladwell the tipping point
how little things can make a big difference
chapter number 1.
ideas spread like epidemics the spread of ideas, products, and behaviors can be compared to the spread of a viral infection.
for years, only a few people are infected, but then, within a short period of time, it becomes an epidemic.
take the suede shoes made by hush puppies, which remained mere shelf warmers until the mid-1990s when suddenly they became a must-have.
within just one year, sales figures jumped from 30,000 to 430,000 pairs.
the next year, around 2 million pairs of hush puppies were sold.
the company itself had nothing to do with the epidemic.
it all started when a couple of hipsters in manhattan started wearing the shoes, which infected others with the idea and set off a trend.
social epidemics share several of the same recurring characteristics as viral infections.
for example, subtle external changes can often strongly affect the transmissibility of a social infection, just as viral infections can spread more easily in the wintertime when most people's immune systems are weaker.
in addition, both will eventually reach a tipping point, the point at which the critical mass has been reached and the spread can no longer be stopped.
it is only an epidemic once the tipping point threshold has been crossed.#
chapter number two.
it is only an epidemic once the tipping point threshold has been crossed.
the tipping point is the moment at which a trend turns into an epidemic and spreads like wildfire.
take a flu strain, for example.
it might spread through a population slowly at the start, but day by day, it infects more and more people until finally it reaches that magical moment when the transmission rate soars dramatically and the epidemic spins out of control.
represented in graphic terms, the growth would be a curve that is slightly inclined at first and then juts up at an almost right angle.
this dramatic turn is the tipping point.
the same kind of growth is also seen in the spread of technological innovations.
when the electronics company sharp made the first affordable fax machine in 1984, it sold around 80,000 of them in the first year and saw that number rise steadily every year until 1987, when it reached the tipping point and sales skyrocketed.
at that particular tipping point, so many people owned a fax machine that anyone who didn't decided they'd better get one too.
in other words, a fundamental change takes place at the tipping point, causing the infection to suddenly spread rampantly.
a certain few key people are often the cause of epidemics.#
chapter number 3.
a certain few key people are often the cause of epidemics.
the 80-20 rule describes a sociological phenomenon found in many groups of people in which 20% of the people tend to influence 80% of the final outcome.
for example, in most societies, 20% of employees carry out 80% of the work, 20% of criminals commit 80% of the crimes, 20% of drivers cause 80% of all accidents, 20% of beer drinkers drink 80% of the beer.
virus epidemics, for example, are sparked by a few key people, but the ratio is even more extreme.
only a small percentage of the people infected perform a majority of the work in promoting the spread.
many of the early aids cases in the united states can be traced back to one flight attendant, who according to his own account had sex with more than 2,500 people in north america, and in doing so significantly contributed to the spread of the virus.
likewise, in the case of social epidemics, it is typically a certain few who speed up the rate of transmission.
most of the time, these are the people with special social connections or a remarkable personality.
ideas spread particularly fast with connectors, or people with a vast social network.#
chapter number 4.
ideas spread particularly fast with connectors, or people with a vast social network.
ideas are often spread by people with many social ties.
the remarkable part is that these connectors usually are not only well-connected in one area but in many different areas.
connectors are the nodal points and idea propagators of social networks.
they know, and like communicating with, lots of different people.
their most important asset is having many so-called weak ties at their disposal.
in other words, having a vast network of acquaintances from all different walks of life is more valuable to them than having close ties with friends.
contacts that transcend social milieus are especially important when it comes to spreading epidemics.
if a virus or idea only spread within a closed circle, it would not become an epidemic.
that's why connectors with networks made up of people from different social groups are vital to the emergence of epidemics.
in a social experiment of the 1960s, scientists found out that every person in the world is connected to everyone else through just a few people, but the connections aren't necessarily distributed equally.
crossing the borders of milieus generally occurs by way of a small group of particularly well-connected individuals.
anyone who wants to spread an idea by word of mouth would therefore do good to focus on these connectors because they are the ones who can set off social epidemics.
some people are born with the gift of persuasion and a knack for selling ideas.#
chapter number five.
some people are born with a gift of persuasion and a knack for selling ideas.
there are some people who are born salesmen.
usually they are people who think positively and have a lot of energy and enthusiasm, qualities that help them persuade others of new ideas.
studies have shown that outstanding salesmen differ from others most noticeably in their nonverbal communication.
they can feel out the right rhythm of a conversation and create a palpable harmony, thereby establishing a sense of trust and intimacy in very little time.
in short, salesmen manage to synchronize themselves with others.
through their nonverbal communication, they get others to perform a kind of dance in which the salesman set the pace.
born salesmen also have a special way of expressing their feelings.
emotions are contagious and salesmen show them so clearly that others empathize with them immediately and as a result, change their own behavior.
salesmen are in a position to influence people on the inside from the outside, which makes them ideal people to spread ideas.
in every network there are mavens who amass information and pass it on to others.#
chapter number six.
in every network, there are mavens who amass information and pass it on to others.
a final type of person that plays a key role in spreading social epidemics is the maven.
mavens have two distinguishing characteristics.
they know a lot about many different things and assimilate information constantly, often about new trends or specific products and how much they cost, etc.
they have social skills and constantly pass on their knowledge to others.
mavens do not have exceptionally big networks, but they have a major influence over those in their own network.
others trust the maven because everyone knows the maven has insider knowledge.
mavens are highly communicative and socially motivated to be helpful and pass on information to others.
if they are confident about a product or service, they recommend it to their friends and acquaintances, and their friends and acquaintances follow those recommendations.
therein lies the power of the maven.
an idea has to stick before it can spread.#
chapter number seven.
an idea has to stick before it can spread.
if you want an idea to spread, you have to make sure it sticks first.
an idea needs something special, something catchy, something that makes it stand out from the rest of the information that inundates us every day.
in order to stick, a message has to be appealing, usually, tweaking something, even a small detail in how the message is presented is what makes all the difference.
for example, in 1954, the cigarette brand winston advertised for its new filter cigarettes with the slogan, winston tastes good, like a cigarette should.
they purposely incorporated a grammatical error, using like instead of as, which caused a small sensation.
the message stuck and ended up spreading like an epidemic.
in just a few years, winston became the most popular cigarette brand in the united states.
another example is from the world of television.
sesame street's huge success was largely based on the fact that the makers of the show introduced an innovation.
when the show first aired, they always stuck to the convention of keeping scenes with fictional characters, the muppets, for example, separate from the scenes with real actors filmed on the street.
but as soon as the makers found out that children were bored with this separation, they decided to bring the muppets into the real scenes.
this small but crucial change is what made sesame street so appealing to its audience.
and the rest is history.
external circumstances have a much greater influence on our behavior than we think.#
chapter number 8.
external circumstances have a much greater influence on our behavior than we think.
our behavior is strongly dependent on external circumstances.
the tiniest changes can have a huge impact on the way we behave in any given situation.
for example, one study showed how being pressed for time can influence our willingness to help.
students were sent to a lecture hall to give a talk.
half of them were told there was no rush to get there, and the other half were told not to be late.
on their way, they all encountered a man who had collapsed.
in the first group, 63% of the students stopped to help the man.
in the second group, it was a mere 10%.
in another study, the stanford prison experiment, 24 healthy males were selected to spend two weeks in a mock prison where each of them was assigned to play the role of either guard or a prisoner.
the experiment quickly spiraled out of control.
the guards exploited their power and grew more and more cruel and sadistic, leading many of the prisoners to suffer from emotional breakdowns.
because of this, the experiment had to be called off completely after only six days.
the change in their circumstances, despite being a mock prison with artificial roles, turned the participants into completely different people and had a huge impact on their behavior.
even the smallest changes in a context can determine whether an epidemic takes off.#
chapter number 9.
even the smallest changes in a context can determine whether an epidemic takes off.
the emergence of epidemics depends largely on external circumstances and can frequently be traced back to small changes.
this was apparent to the authorities in new york city when in the mid-1990s the city's crime spiraled out of control.
they blamed a number of seemingly harmless details.
they thought that things like graffitied subway cars or subway fare evaders going unpunished sent out signals to people that nobody was taking care of the decaying situation and that anyone and everyone could do whatever they wanted.
in order to get a handle on this crime epidemic, authorities began focusing on these more minor details.
privacy was removed, seemingly overnight, and fare evasion became a punishable crime.
by showing zero tolerance for what seemed like trivialities, it became clear to the public that reckless behavior was no longer acceptable.
the crime rate dropped rapidly in the following years.
the epidemic was reversed thanks to these small interventions.
another subtle factor that plays a role in the emergence of social epidemics is the size of a group.
the rule of 150 states that only in groups of no more than 150 people can a dynamic develop that can later extend beyond the group.
in other words, if you want groups, for example clubs, committees, companies, or schools to be incubators for contagious messages, make sure to keep them small.
final summary#
Conclusion
thank you for listening to the chapters of the tipping point by malcolm gladwell.
the key point to remember from these chapters is that there are several crucial factors that play a role in triggering epidemics.
they are easy to recognize and can be consciously used to spread ideas, products, or behaviors.
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