Outliers
People are fascinated by success stories, especially the rags-to-riches stories wherein someone starts from nothing and, through a combination of hard work and extraordinary luck, becomes famous and rich. In his book Outliers: The Story of Success, author Malcolm Gladwell profiles a number of individuals who have been tremendously successful. Some of the names are well-known: Bill Gates, the Beatles, Robert Oppenheimer. The stories of their success are much more complex and interesting than one could ever imagine. Gladwell also provides plenty of examples of people for whom success has been elusive. They appear to have much in their favor and yet circumstances such as culture, class, family and even date of birth relegated them to an existence of missed opportunities and mediocrity. Talent, hard work and luck are certainly components of success but, as Gladwell shows, the back story is often richer and more complicated.
In the beginning of the book, Gladwell points out what biologists already know, that the tallest oak in the forest grows from the hardiest acorn -- but there are other factors as well. The sapling grew in a place where no other trees blocked its sunlight and the soil underneath it was rich and deep. Circumstantially, no rabbit chewed through the tender young bark and no lumberjack felled it before it reach maturity. "Successful people come from hardy seeds. But do we know enough about the sunlight that warmed them, the soil in which they put down the roots, and the rabbits and lumberjacks they were lucky enough to avoid?" (Gladwell, 2008, p. 19).
If one can distill from Gladwell's anecdotal evidence one simple formula for success, it is that success equals preparedness plus opportunity. "Outliers challenges common assumptions about high achievers as it builds a case for nurture vs. nature, attitude over aptitude" (BusinessWeek, 2008). For example, Gladwell takes nothing away from Bill Gates with respect to his native intelligence. By all accounts, Gates was a bright kid who was not sufficiently challenged in his public school. His parents had the means to place him in a private school...
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