How Little Things Can Make a Big Difference
Ratings312
Average rating3.9
Malcolm has an uncanny ability to take a lot and summarize it with anecdotes. The Tipping Point is a pretty good book on how ideas spread and essential reading for anyone in marketing.
This is my first Malcolm Gladwell book, and I can see why his books are so popular. He is able to take complex social psychology and explain it in very readable and understandable ways. Continually as I was reading this book, I would think about the experiences I was having in everyday life and how they relate to tipping points. Fascinating and useful.
All creators want to see their finished products get broad attention. This book investigates that illusive point where things fall in line, momentum begins to build and success is inevitable. Like with other Gladwell books, The Tipping Point is peppered with stories that seem unrelated at first, but are always brought back to the central theme (something I wish I was as good at). It's an entertaining book, and an informative book, but I felt it was missing a way to FIND a tipping point.
There are undoubtedly some problems with Gladwell's analysis, but the ideas are interesting enough, and explained concisely enough to warrant four stars, I think.
It's standard Gladwell; fascinating sociological insights into how peculiar things happen and why people follow one another even in the most extreme of cases (his case studies on how Hush Puppies were tipped by a bunch of cool kids in East Village, the connections between high-school shootings post Columbine, and wide-spread pseudo-sickness, and how all these areas are heavily influenced via the most unlikely of things were particularly fascinating) It took a while to get into his train of thought, at least longer than [b:Blink: The Power of Thinking Without Thinking 40102 Blink The Power of Thinking Without Thinking Malcolm Gladwell https://images.gr-assets.com/books/1440763417s/40102.jpg 1180927] - but once that happened is was a joyous as any given Gladwell book/podcast/listen. 3 and a half stars.
The world is a much more interesting place thanks to people like Malcolm Gladwell, who make things look less prosaic or mundane.
All creators want to see their finished products get broad attention. This book investigates that illusive point where things fall in line, momentum begins to build and success is inevitable. Like with other Gladwell books, The Tipping Point is peppered with stories that seem unrelated at first, but are always brought back to the central theme (something I wish I was as good at). It's an entertaining book, and an informative book, but I felt it was missing a way to FIND a tipping point.
Focusing on a particular set of things, this book explores how an epidemic (of things, ideas etc) spreads voraciously or “tips”. The argument made is quite convincing but this is, by no means, a wild page turner. Some sections are pretty interesting, others you can just skim over and not lose track of anything. All things said, things flow pretty neatly into each other and the idea presented is tied up into a nice, cohesive book.