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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Starred Review. 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. (Jan. 16)

Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

Based on a class at Stanford taught by one of the authors, this book profiles how some ideas "stick" in our minds while the majority fall by the wayside. Urban legends, conspiracy theories, and compelling advertising make up much of the intrinsically interesting examples that the Heaths profile that qualify for "stickiness." This book explores what makes social epidemics "epidemic" and, as the Heaths cite from Malcolm Gladwell's Tipping Point (2000), defines the secret recipe that makes an idea viral. The principles of stickiness are examined--an unexpected outcome, lots of concrete details that we remember, emotion, simplicity, and credibility--all packaged in an easily told story format. Taking these five stickiness attributes, the book offers numerous examples of how these properties make up the stories we are all familiar with--the urban legend about kidney theft and the razor blades supposedly lurking in Halloween candy. Exercises, checklists, and other tools are sprinkled throughout the book to help the reader understand and test how stickiness can be applied to their ideas, whether they are teachers, parents, or CEOs. Gail Whitcomb

Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved


奇普 希思(Chip Heath),斯坦福大学商学院组织行为学教授。与丹 希思共同著有全球畅销书《决断力》(Decisive)。

丹 希思(Dan Heath),杜克大学社会企业发展中心高级研究员,前哈佛商学院研究员,Thinkwell(思睿)新媒体教育公司创办人之一。

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豆瓣评论

  • Ying
    Stanford GSB推荐。是一本好书--简单、清晰、记得住、好实践。12-20
  • 琳琳-青葱小白
    1)SUCCESSs六大原则:简约(simple), 意外(unexpected), 具体(concrete), 可信(credible), 情感(emotional), 故事(stories); 2)关键词:好奇心缺口、知识诅咒、高质概念;3)创意就是用一种讨喜的方式指出大家不了解的东西;4)用途:广告、营销、演讲、面试等;5)内容很好,例子很讨巧,就是翻译不给力,有空我再翻翻英文版去~~08-19
  • 其实curse of knowledge就是所知障呀~05-13
  • 林@语堂
    感觉是对沟通(本质是信息传播)技巧的讨论,共6个原则,一个原则一章内容。对于从事教育、培训、写作这一类,输出idea型的工作者来说,更有参考价值吧。建议看英文版,还是挺好读的。05-10
  • Ann
    现在听这些nonfiction总是觉得很重复,可能是类似东西读了很多了。给我印象最深的是curse of knowledge,就是一旦拥有了的知识就很难去设身处地想象没有这个知识的人该怎样接受这个知识了。对于教课有点启发。03-13

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