The Saturday Guardian, February 24 2007
'...smart, lively...it's worth reading this book. In the right hands, it will help.'
New Statesman, January 29 2007
'...peppered with memorable stories ... a gift to anyone who needs to get a message across and make it stick.'
Psychology Today
'Solid instructions, a selection of exercises, and plenty of vivid real-world examples.'
The Washington Post, January 17 2007
'Anyone interested in influencing others...can learn from this book.'
Time Magazine, November 6 2006
'The Heaths push beyond what sounds like it should work and explain why it actually does.'
U.S. News & World Report
'The Heaths' own big idea is already generating business school buzz.'
Publishers Weekly, October 2006
'an entertaining, practical guide to effective communication'
Brandweek
'A rational, empirical analysis that's part business, part behavioral psychology.'
Product Description
What is that makes urban myths so persistent but many everyday truths so eminently forgettable? How do newspapers set about ensuring that their headlines make you want to read on? And why do we remember complicated stories but not complicated facts? In the course of over ten years of study, Chip and Dan Heath have established what it is that determines whether particular ideas or stories stick in our minds or not, and "Made to Stick" is the fascinating outcome of their painstaking research. Packed full of case histories and through provoking anecdotes, it shows, among other things, how one Australian scientist convinced the world he'd discovered the cause of stomach ulcers by drinking a glass filled with bacteria, how a gifted sports reporter got people to watch a football match by showing them the outside of the stadium, and how high-concept pitches such as 'Jaws on a spaceship' ("Alien") and 'Die Hard on a bus' ("Speed") convince movie executives to invest vast sums of money in a project on the basis of almost no information. Entertaining and informative by turns, this is a fascinating and multi-faceted account of a key area of human behaviour. At the same time, by showing how we can all use such cleverly devised strategies as the 'Velcro Theory of Memory' and 'curiosity gaps', it offers superbly practical insights, setting out principles we all can adopt to make sure that we get our ideas across effectively.
From the Publisher
The intellectual prequel to "The Tipping Point".
From the Back Cover
'Criminal gangs are drugging people and then stealing their kidneys' - widely repeated urban myth
'The recommended daily allowance of iron for an adult is 14mg' - widely forgotten scientific fact
In Made to Stick Chip and Dan Heath take the lid off one of the great mysteries of life: why it is that we have no difficulty at all in remembering the details of, say, a bogus scare story, and yet often struggle to recall information that may be vital to us. Isolating the six factors that make ideas 'sticky', they reveal, through compelling analysis and entertaining anecdotes, precisely how our minds absorb information - and what we can all do to make sure our own ideas register with others.
'This book is a gift to anyone who needs to get a message across and make it stick' - New Statesman
--This text refers to the
Paperback
edition.
About the Author
Chip Heath is a Professor of Organizational Behavior in the Graduate School of Business at Stanford University. His research examines why certain ideas - ranging from urban legends to folk medical cures, from Chicken Soup for the Soul stories to business strategy myths - survive and prosper in the social marketplace of ideas. His research has appeared in a variety of academic journals, and popular accounts of his research have appeared in Scientific American, the Financial Times, the Washington Post, BusinessWeek, Psychology Today, and Vanity Fair. He lives in Los Gatos, California. Dan Heath is a consultant at Duke Corporate Education, one of the world's top providers of executive education. Prior to joining Duke, he was a researcher at Harvard Business School, writing 10 cases on entrepreneurship that are used in business school programmes. Heath is also the co-founder of Thinkwell, a publishing company dedicated to creating high-quality, multimedia university textbooks. Dan has an MBA from Harvard Business School. He lives in Raleigh, North Carolina.