Made
to Stick
Why Some Ideas Survive and Others Die
From Publishers Weekly
Review on Amazon.com:
Unabashedly inspired by Malcolm Gladwell's bestselling
The Tipping Point, the brothers Heath-Chip a professor
at Stanford's business school, Dan a teacher and
textbook publisher-offer an entertaining, practical
guide to effective communication. Drawing extensively
on psychosocial studies on memory, emotion and motivation,
their study is couched in terms of "stickiness"-that
is, the art of making ideas unforgettable. They
start by relating the gruesome urban legend about
a man who succumbs to a barroom flirtation only
to wake up in a tub of ice, victim of an organ-harvesting
ring. What makes such stories memorable and ensures
their spread around the globe? The authors credit
six key principles: simplicity, unexpectedness,
concreteness, credibility, emotions and stories.
(The initial letters spell out "success"-well,
almost.) They illustrate these principles with a
host of stories, some familiar (Kennedy's stirring
call to "land a man on the moon and return
him safely to the earth" within a decade) and
others very funny (Nora Ephron's anecdote of how
her high school journalism teacher used a simple,
embarrassing trick to teach her how not to "bury
the lead"). Throughout the book, sidebars show
how bland messages can be made intriguing. Fun to
read and solidly researched, this book deserves
a wide readership.