Outliers - by Malcolm Gladwell

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'Outliers' is a book authored by Malcolm Gladwell and it's a book about high achieving individuals who do things that go beyond the realm of ordinary such as top athletes, innovators, billionaires, professionals and scientists. Outliers explores the hidden forces behind successful people and debunks the myth that success is mostly determined by talent and hard work. Success is not just about innate ability, it's combined with a number of key factors such as opportunity, meaningful hard work (10,000 hours to gain mastery) and your culture legacy. Random factors of chance, such as when and where you were born can influence the opportunities you have. 


Malcolm Gladwell is a journalist, author and public speaker. Gladwell has been a staff writer for The New Yorker and has authored best selling books that include: The Tipping Point, Blink, Outliers, David and Goliath and What the Dog Saw. 






Summary & Key Learnings


Introduction - The Roseto Mystery "These people were dying of old age. That's it."

Part One: Opportunity
1. The Matthew Effect "For unto everyone that hath shall be given, and he shall have abundance. But from him that hath not shall by taken away even that which he hath." - Matthew 25:29
2. The 10,000 - Hour Rule "In Hamburg, we had to play for eight hours."
3. The Trouble with Geniuses, Part 1 "Knowledge of a boy's IQ is of little help if you are faced with a formful of clever boys."
4. The Trouble with Geniuses, Part 2 "After protracted negotiations, it was agreed that Robert would be put on probation."
5. The Three Lessons of Joe Flom "Mary got a quarter."

Part Two: Legacy
6. Harlan, Kentucky "Die like a man like your brother did!"
7. The Ethic Theory of Plane Crashes "Captain, the weather radar has helped us a lot."
8. Rice Paddies and Math Tests "No one who can rise before dawn three hundred sixty days a year fails to make his family rich."
9. Marita's Bargain "All my friends now are from KIPP."

Epilogue
A Jamacian Story "If a progeny of young colored children is brought forth, these are emancipated."
 



Introduction~

The Roseto Mystery

"These people were dying of old age. That's it."

The opening chapter introduces Gladwell's mission to apply similar ideas to Stewart Wolf's discovery on 'The Roseto Mystery' to the modern understanding of success. This chapter is basically stating that Gladwell wants to apply a scientific approach to discovering the causes of success. 'The Roseto Mystery' was a mystery where physicians weren't able to explain why residents from the Italian town Roseto, that immigrated to Pennsylvania in the late 19th century, had an astonishing low incidence of heart disease in residents under 65. Wolf looked at possible explanations including diet, exercise, genetics and the region of origin but found these explanations badly deficient. Ultimately, Wolf arrived at the conclusion that the astounding health conditions in Roseto were linked to the harmonious and nurturing nature of the community itself.





Part One: Opportunity

1. Matthew Effect

"For unto everyone that hath shall be given, and he shall have abundance. But from him that hath not shall by taken away even that which he hath." - Matthew 25:29

This chapter talks about 'The Matthew Effect' which is basically another way to state 'the law of cumulative advantage,' which is advantages tend to accumulate over time. Those that are given an early push get more advantages as time goes by and those that are put at a disadvantage continue to get limited resources.

This chapter begins with an account of a 2007 Memorial Cup Hockey championship game between the Medicine Hat Tigers and the Vancouver Giants where the Giants emerged victorious. While analysing the hockey roster for the Lethbridge Broncos, it was discovered that most of the players were born in the same few months. The Tigers roster exhibited exactly the same tendency. Most of the players were born early in the year, in January, February, or March. 
It was found that in Canadian hockey, recruiting at the cutoff date favours players born earlier in the year. Within a given group of recruits, a player born just after the date will be more mature relative to a player born later in the year. Thus, the cutoff date gives some individuals a built-in advantage based on birth date. Similar cutoff-based trends that favour relatively mature students can be observed in European soccer and in academic testing in math and science.

The "Matthew Effect" was an idea developed by sociologist Robert Merton; it takes its name from a verse in the Gospel of Matthew, which states that those who already have advantages will see further abundance, while the disadvantaged will simply continue to face losses. This kind of skewing can result from random factors such as birth date, which deprive large numbers of competitors of meaningful opportunities.

Tip – If you are put at an advantage over your peers and friends from an early age, the advantages will lead to meaningful differences in performance that persist for extended periods.





2. The 10,000 - Hour Rule

"In Hamburg, we had to play for eight hours."

In this chapter describes the 10,000 Hour Rule which is a rule that it takes about 10,000 hours of deliberate practice to become an expert at anything. While this rule is true, the convergence of luck and opportunity is needed. For example, Bill Gates had unlimited exposure to computers at an early age, most of the Silicon Valley Billionaires were just at the right age (born around 1955) and were in their early 20s when the computer revolution began.


This chapter begins with an account of the University of Michigan Computer Center and of one student who benefited from the Center's resources. The student was Bill Joy, who programmed at the Center in the early 1970s. Joy went on to become a revolutionary software developer and a co-founder of Sun Microsystems. Gladwell argues that Joy's remarkable success was the product of something other than exceptional talent. According to Gladwell, innately talented individuals require constant practice in order to translate talent into achievement.


This chapter also details the work of psychologist K. Anders Ericsson, who found in a study of music students that the primary determinant of professional success was the number of practice hours that the students committed to their music over time. True mastery in almost any field requires 10,000 hours of dedicated practice. With this information, Gladwell returns to Bill Joy and explains that the young programmer had the advantage of a relatively sophisticated Computer Center that was open twenty-four hours per day, hence had no trouble reaching his 10,000 hours quickly.


Tip – Preparation does play an oversized role when it comes to achieving greatness but so does luck and opportunity.





3. The Trouble with Geniuses, Part 1

"Knowledge of a boy's IQ is of little help if you are faced with a formful of clever boys."

Having high intelligence (IQ) does not automatically mean that you will be successful in life. Above a certain IQ range, there isn't much difference in performance.

“If intelligence matters only up to a point, then past that point, other things—things that have nothing to do with intelligence—must start to matter more. It’s like basketball again: once someone is tall enough, then we start to care about speed and court sense and agility and ball-handling skills and shooting touch.”

There is a threshold for achieving in a particular area. Once that threshold is achieved, the influence of grades and IQ scores lessens with time. Gladwell supports this claim by listing recent Nobel Prize Winners in Medicine and Chemistry. Not all of these winners came from the absolutely best-ranked colleges, but all of them came from very good schools that provided firm grounds for academic success.

Gladwell also considers a study conducted by the University of Michigan Law School. This study focused on the law school's minority students, who generally faced relaxed admissions standards and earned lower grades than their non-minority peers. However, this disparity in grading standards did not translate into any difference in real-world success. The minority students were above the minimum aptitude threshold that they would need to pass to be professionally successful.

Tip – Intelligence does not determine achievement after a certain threshold.





4. The Trouble with Geniuses, Part 2

"After protracted negotiations, it was agreed that Robert would be put on probation."


Having a great mind is not enough. Genius has to be nurtured and encouraged, upbringing plays a role on how successful one becomes. Background and upbringing have more of an impact on success than IQ scores. Children from middle and upper-class families are taught to speak up, stand for themselves, and express thought independence. This explains why they achieve more throughout their lives. Their parents are also more involved in their lives and interests and this has a great impact on how they approach opportunities and challenges. They grow up believing that their voice and opinions matter even in the face of authority. These parents teach their children to demand respect and to “customise” a situation to suit to their needs. In other words, they teach their kids practical intelligence.

Practical intelligence is the soft and social skills that help you more easily navigate society – negotiation, comfort questioning authority, respecting your place in the work, etc. By contrast, poorer parents are often intimidated by authority and let their children follow a pattern of “natural growth” – there’s less pushing, prodding and encouraging than in wealthier families. This means children from poorer households are less likely to be taught practical intelligence, which radically decreases their chances for success. These children grow to be timid around many situations and develop stifling deference to authority.

“The heavily scheduled middle-class child is exposed to a constantly shifting set of experiences. She learns teamwork and how to cope in highly structured settings. She is taught how to interact comfortably with adults, and to speak up when she needs to. In Lareau’s words, the middle-class children learn a sense of “entitlement.” ~ Sociologist, Annette Lareau


Tip – More involved parents lead to an individual's success in life. Involved parents talk to their kids more and critically provide more opportunity for them by taking them to museums, putting them into summer school, helping them with their homework etc. These kids develop a sense of 'entitlement', so less likely to settle with the first 'No'.





5. The Three Lessons of Joe Flom

"Mary got a quarter."


For some outliers, disadvantages are often blessings in disguise. Rags-to riches stories focus on the many odds that the hero had to overcome, but they fail to point out that the odds work to empower the hero over future adversities. Outliers also benefit from “Demographic luck” or being born at the right time. For example, those who came to maturity in the 1930s during the height of the great depression had less of a chance to make it than those who matured later when the economy was booming. At the same time, engaging in meaningful work no matter how humbling gives you the opportunity to learn and grow. Humble meaningful work can also serve as a pebblestone for the prosperity of future generations. Meaningful work makes you want to ‘put in the hours’. Sociologist, Louise Farkas studied the family tree of many immigrants and found that their offspring became professionals. She put it down to the fact that it was because of their humble origins not inspite of it that they did well – i.e. they had been raised in a family where hard work was valued and practiced.


Tip – Starting out at a disadvantage can be an opportunity in itself. Individuals that were raised in families where hard work was valued and practiced became high-achieving professionals.





Part Two: Legacy

6. Harlan, Kentucky

"Die like a man like your brother did!"

Cultural legacies play an important role in determining the success of outliers. These legacies shape how we react to our environments, how hard we work, how we approach opportunities, and our deference to power and authority. Chapter 6 analyses culture legacy and influence. Gladwell opens this discussion by describing a bloody feud that took place in the town of Harlan in the late nineteenth century. 

Harlan, Kentucky, was founded in 1819 by eight immigrant families from Scotland and Ireland. However, all was not peaceful, as two of the town’s founding families – the Howards and the Turners – didn’t get along. Yet, this was a pattern that was repeating itself in small towns up and down the Appalachians. The reason for this pattern of violence? A culture of honor.

Such a culture arises when an individual’s reputation is central to their livelihood and sense of self-worth. Working as a herdsman would fit such a description. The Scottish-Irish immigrants that inhabited Appalachia had a particularly strong culture of honor, as they had been herdsmen who’d carved out a livelihood on rocky, inhospitable land. Consequently, they dealt with conflict by forming tight familial bonds and placing loyalty to their kin above all else. This partly explains why murder rates are higher in the southern U.S. than anywhere else, but softer crimes such as muggings are lower.


Tip – Cultural legacies persist, generation after generation. Your cultural history greatly influences your present behaviour, which is a key factor in your chances of success.





7. The Ethic Theory of Plane Crashes

"Captain, the weather radar has helped us a lot."


In this chapter opens with an account of Korean Air Flight 801. Between 1988 and 1998, American Airlines reported only one plane accident in every 4 million flights. In comparison, during this same time period, Korean Air lost nearly five planes per million flights. Gladwell argues that the reason for Korean Air’s spate of crashes was Korea’s cultural legacy.

While each individual has their own unique personality, the community they grow up in can have a large influence on how they behave. Dutch Psychologist Geert Hofstede was fascinated by the cultural behavioural variations between countries. Keen to understand which cultures valued and respected authority and which didn’t, he created the Powder Distance Index (PDI for short).

This was of particular interest to the aviation industry because a vast amount of plane crashes occur when the co-pilot is too timid to point out faults to the pilot who is their superior. Concurrently, encouraging the co-pilots who come from high PDI countries (e.g., Korea) to assert themselves proved to be much harder than encouraging those from lower PDI countries (e.g., the U.S.), but it proved to be essential.

In 2000, David Greenberg from Delta Air Lines was brought in to transform the flailing Korean Air. The first thing he did to combat the timidity of the co-pilot towards their superior was to make English the standardised language in the cockpit. This provided the pilots with a new form of identity in which the high Korean PDI norms could be circumvented, allowing the co-pilots to become more assertive. Able to overcome the norms of their culture of deference, Korean Air hasn’t had a crash since 1999.


Tip – Awareness should be brought to cultural legacies as they dictate behaviour and thus the chances of success.





8. Rices Paddies and Math Tests

"No one who can rise before dawn three hundred sixty days a year fails to make his family rich."


When English speakers are asked to look at a list of seven individual digits then look away and memorise them for 20 seconds, their recall is about 50 percent accurate. However, Chinese speakers’ recall is 100 percent accurate. The reason for this is, we memorise easily what can be said or read within a two-second timeframe. When Chinese speakers see a seven-digit list, their language allows them to fit all the digits into a two-second span, unlike English speakers. Further, the English-speaking number system is highly irregular. For example, numbers above 20 put the “decade” first and the unit number second, e.g., 21, but for numbers below 20, it’s the other way around, e.g., 14. This isn’t the case in China, Japan, and Korea. Their number system is more logical. For example, 11 is ten-one, and 24 is two-tens-four.

Consequently, Asian children learn to count much faster than American children. It also means they can perform more complex mathematical tasks at a younger age. Gladwell argues that because Asian children have the advantage of a logical number system, it’s more likely that they will enjoy math than their American counterparts. Consequently, they are more likely to put in the effort to learn math, so the stereotype of Asians being good at math comes from the logic of their language, not a natural innate ability.

In addition to language, rice – the staple of the Asian diet – also helps students learn math because rice farming fosters an intense work ethic. Farming rice is much harder than farming Western crops. A robust, profitable rice harvest demands precision, coordination and patience. Feudal systems in Europe left farmers little to show from their work; they had to turn over most of their crops to ruthless landlords, but such systems were not prevalent in Asia, so rice farming offered a clear relationship between effort and reward. As a result, a culture of hard work developed; one particularly illuminating age-old saying was, “No one who can rise before dawn three hundred sixty days a year fails to make his family rich.”

Asians are generally good at math and it’s part of their cultural legacy. People with ancestors who worked in rice paddies tend to inherit an attitude towards work that is particularly helpful when learning math. This tendency persists, even generations after families have left rice paddies behind.

Tip – It is easier to count in Asian languages, because of this math is more intuitive to South East Asians as opposed to westerners. Most of the cultures in China, Korea, and Japan have rice as their staple food. Cultivating rice is more labor-intensive compared to other forms of agriculture and this translates to different attitudes towards work and life in general.




9. Marita's Bargain

"All my friends now are from KIPP."


The difference in performance between low-income students and high-income students is not down to differences in intelligence. Given the same opportunities, students from the two groups perform at the same level. Low-income students’ performance drops during the summer vacation. Their reading levels drop and their maths grades go down suggesting that the home environment has an oversized effect on school performance during the period.The length of the summer vacation also has implications on how well students perform. Students from the Asian countries of Japan and China have longer school days and as a result have better reading and math skills.

Gladwell open chapter 9 by providing a brief history of the KIPP (Knowledge Is Power Program) middle school in New York. The KIPP Academy is in one of the poorest neighborhoods in New York City. It has large classes, no entrance requirements, and the students are chosen by lottery. Roughly half the students are African American, and the other half are Hispanic. Seventy-five percent of them are from single-parent families, and 90 percent qualify for “free or reduced lunch.” Yet, it’s one of the most desirable public schools in the city.

However, Gladwell argues that KIPP’s success isn’t due to the curriculum, teachers, or resources. It’s due to the fact that KIPP takes cultural legacies seriously. In America, it’s traditional for schools to have a long summer vacation, but this inadvertently affects the learning development of more disadvantaged kids. Sociologist Karl Alexander asked Baltimore students from first to fourth grades across low, middle, and high socioeconomic backgrounds to take a math- and reading-skills test before and after the summer holiday.

He found that while the wealthiest students significantly advanced their test scores, the poorer kids regressed, thus starting their year at a disadvantage. This is because wealthier students are more likely to be exposed to learning stimuli during the summer break, whereas the poorer kids aren’t, putting them at a disadvantage.

Tip – If we recognise the reasons behind uneven playing fields, we can create more opportunities for people to succeed.





Epilogue

A Jamacian Story

"If a progeny of young colored children is brought forth, these are emancipated."


There is an important ethnic background to Gladwell's family. In Jamaica, male slave-owners traditionally had affairs and relationships with their female slaves. One of Gladwell's ancestors was a slave-owner named William Ford; Daisy Ford was one of William's direct descendants and possessed, as a result of her part-Caucasian background, lighter skin that allowed her social advantages denied to darker-skinned Jamaicans. Though the relatively light-skinned Joyce was at an advantage in Jamaica, she found that her ethnicity put her at a disadvantage in other contexts. In England, for instance, she and Graham had difficulty finding housing. (Joyce recorded one such encounter with discrimination in Brown Face, Big Master, a book about her own life experiences.) Gladwell is aware of how all these seemingly random and arbitrary factors (location, skin colour, and opportunity) play a role in guiding virtually any success. Gladwell ends Outliers by acknowledging that history and community are the factors that make success possible, in his own family and beyond.

Tip – Successful people "are products of history and community, of opportunity and legacy."





Outliers Sketch Drawing: https://www.behance.net/gallery/71793413/Outliers-Sketchnotes-2014



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