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One Page Book Review: Made To Stick

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Made To Stick

Made To Stick

I just finished reading “Made to Stick” book by Chip Heath and Dan Heath. The book talks about why some ideas survive and others die. In short, it’s a great book which will transform how we communicate our ideas. It talks about the vital principles of winning ideas and tells us how we can apply these rules to making our own messages stick.

Here is what I learned from the book:

The six principles can be summarized as: SUCCESs for Simple, Unexpected, Concrete, Credible, Emotional and Story.

Principle #1 Simple:

We need to find the essential core of our idea. To strip an idea to its core, we need to be a master of exclusion and prioritize the important things relentlessly. It’s about determining the single most important thing about our idea. Once we find the core, we need to share the core – with our employees as well as customers. When we communicate the core, it also needs to be compact. Simplicity comes when message is core and compact.

Principle #2 Unexpected:

How do we get our audience to pay attention to our ideas, and how do we maintain their interest when we need time to get our ideas across? We need to violate people’s expectations. We need to surprise people and break the pattern of their guessing machines. But surprises don’t last long. For our ideas to endure, we must generate interest, curiosity and mystery. We can engage people’s curiosity systematically over long period of time by opening gaps in their knowledge and then filling those gaps.

Principle #3 Concrete:

We need to help people understand our ideas clearly and remember it. We must explain them our ideas in terms of human actions, objects or some sensory information. Often abstract statements make it harder to remember the idea. It makes harder to coordinate our activities with others. That’s why mission statements, strategies, visions are often ambiguous to the point of being meaningless. Instead, if we talk in terms of individuals, or objects, then things become more concrete and easy to remember. And that’s why concrete and clear ideas become sticky.

Principle #4 Credibility:

How do we make people believe our ideas? There are different approaches to bring the credibility to our ideas. Some authority can talk about our idea, so that many people will trust it. But in most day-to-day situations, we don’t like such authority. So some ideas need to have their own internal credentials. We need ways to help people test our ideas for themselves – a “try before buy” philosophy. We also need to provide them convincing details and some easily accessible statistics. Sometimes too much of statistics are also not much help. So another way to bring statistics to life is to contextualize them in terms that are more human.

Principle # 5 Emotions:

How do we get people to care about ideas? We make them feel something. Instead of giving statistical information about some group, if we talk about individual, the chances are more that people will remove their analytical hats and will think emotionally about idea we are trying to communicate. Another approach to make people care about ideas is to use piggybacking strategy. We can associate our ideas with the existing emotional ideas that appeal to many people.

Principle #6 Story:

How do we get people to act on our ideas? We tell them stories. Hearing stories acts as a mental simulator, preparing us to respond more quickly and effectively. The stories are told and retold when they contain wisdom. They are the most effective teaching tools. But we need to make sure our stories are strongly associated with entertainment, and not instructions. Another importance of telling stories is to provide inspiration. Inspiration drives action.

So these are the six principles that are explained in the book to great details. The book also talks about many examples illustrating how people have used these principles, making it easier for us to visualize, understand and learn how we can act upon these principles. The principles are short and simple, but what makes this book interesting is these examples.

My $0.02s: I won’t say it’s a must buy book for your short term goals. But you should read it once when time permits to develop your long-term thinking about how you generate and communicate the ideas and make them sticky.

Written by Aditya

November 23rd, 2008 at 11:36 pm

One Page Book Review – The Dip

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As a part of the series – "Adeologue – One Page Book Review", my friend, Jitesh Shetty has reviewed "The Dip" by Seth Godin.

Background: One thing I noticed that people don’t
have much time to read multiple-pages excerpts of the book. And it is
hard to understand which book should we read before knowing about its
content and its theme. So before buying a new book, reading this "one
page" excerpt will help you to invest your time and hence the money in
more efficient manner.

Download the One Page Book Review here: The Dip

Feel free to share this review with your friends and colleagues. It will help them to gain more in less time.

If you have something to suggest me to improve this review process,
please do not forget to write your opinions in the comment section.

Call to participate: If you are also writing book summaries or reviews, then I invite you to participate in this exciting project of reviewing books in one page.

Writing a review in a one page was very challenging, but was fun too. — Jitesh Shetty

Come forward and join this fun venture and help the reader community to gain more in less time. If you are interested in submitting any book reviews, please drop me an email at aditya AT adeologue DOT com.

Some previous one page book reviews:

Unleashing the Ideavirus By Seth Godin

Soar with your strengths By Donald Clifton and Paula Nelson

The Present By Spencer Johnson

Beyond Code By Rajesh Setty

Written by Aditya

June 5th, 2007 at 9:04 am

One Page Book Review – Beyond Code

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As a part of the series – "Adeologue – One Page Book Review", I am posting a review of "Beyond Code" by Rajesh Setty.

Background: One thing I noticed that people don’t have much time to read multiple-pages excerpts of the book. And it is hard to understand which book should we read before knowing about its content and its theme. So before buying a new book, reading this "one page" excerpt will help you to invest your time and hence the money in more efficient manner.

This review is available for FREE to download.

Download the One Page Book Review here: Beyond Code

Feel free to share this review with your friends and colleagues. It will help them to gain more in less time.

If you have something to suggest me to improve this review process, please do not forget to write your opinions in the comment section.

Some previous one page book reviews:

Unleashing the Ideavirus By Seth Godin
Soar with your strengths By Donald Clifton and Paula Nelson
The Present By Spencer Johnson

Written by Aditya

March 30th, 2007 at 12:08 am

One Page Book Review – Unleashing The Ideavirus

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As a part of the series – "Adeologue – One Page Book Review", I am posting a review of "Unleashing The Ideavirus" by Seth Godin.

Background: One thing I noticed that people don’t have much time to read multiple-pages excerpts of the book. And it is hard to understand which book should we read before knowing about its content and its theme. So before buying a new book, reading this "one page" excerpt will help you to invest your time and hence the money in more efficient manner.

This review is available for FREE to download.

Download the One Page Book Review here: Unleashing The Ideavirus

Feel free to forward this review to your friends or colleagues. It will help them to gain more in less time and also for me to spread the good word.

If you have something to share, please do not forget to write your opinions in the comment section.

For previous book reviews, please visit Adeologue: One Page Book Review

Written by Aditya

March 17th, 2007 at 3:58 am

One Page Book Review – The Present

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As a part of the series – "Adeologue – One Page Book Review", I am posting the review of a book "The Present" by Spencer Johnson.

Please find the background of this series in my previous post.

This review is available for FREE to download.

Download the One Page Book Review here: The Present

So please feel free to forward this review to your friends or colleagues. It will help them to gain more in less time and also for me to spread the good word.

If you have something to share, please do not forget to write your opinions in the comment section.

Written by Aditya

February 20th, 2007 at 9:47 pm

One Page Book Review – Soar With Your Strengths

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I am excited to announce a new initiative of my blogging effort. One of my new year’s resolutions is to read at least one book per month. But I don’t want to just read it and leave it in the shelf. I want to share what I learned and add some value to the reader community. In this regard, I am starting a new project, called ‘Adeologue – One Page Book Review’. I will be writing an one-page excerpt of the book I read.

One thing I found is that people don’t have much time to read multiple-pages excerpts of the book. And it is hard to understand which book should we read before knowing about its content and theme. So before buying a new book, reading this "one page" excerpt will help you to invest your time and hence the money in more efficient manner.

To start with, I am publishing one page book review of the book – “Soar With Your Strengths” – By Donald Cliffton and Paula Nelson.

You can download this review at following link:

Download Review for Soar With Your Strengths

To start with, I am publishing these reviews for FREE. Feel free to download and forward it to your friends to gain more in less time. Also it will help me to spread the word.

I sincerely thank my mentor, Rajesh Setty for the initial inspiration and motivation of this idea. I also thank my friends, Vinay and Rohan for their comments and suggestions on the initial version of this document.

Please feel free to leave feedbacks and suggestions in the comment section. Let me know how can I improve so that it can help you more.

Wish you happy reading!

Written by Aditya

January 18th, 2007 at 7:39 pm