Title: The Tipping Point
1The Tipping Point
2Three Rules of The Tipping Point
- 1. The Law of the Few
- 2. The Stickiness Factor
- 3. The Power of Context
- They provide a direction for how to go about
reaching a tipping point.
3The Law of the Few
- Connectors
- People with a special gift of bringing the world
together SOCIAL GLUE SPREAD MESSAGE - Mavens
- They accumulate knowledge and have the social
skills to start word-of-mouth epidemics DATA
BANKS PROVIDE THE MESSAGE - Salesmen
- They persuade us
4The Law of the Few
- Connectors
- Paul Revere vs. William Dawes
- Word of mouth is still the most important form of
human communication (p. 32). - Best bar / restaurant in town
- 53,000 American soldiers are buried in France. .
.
5The Stickiness Factor
- Your change models the theme is the stickiness
factor - Sesame Street vs. Blues Clues
6The Power of Context
- Epidemics are sensitive to the conditions and
circumstances of the times and places in which
they occur the context, p. 139 - Laser disk between CD and DVD
- Ethanol or fuel cells or ?
- Video/telephones
7The Power of Context
Character is more like a bundle of habits and
tendencies and interests, loosely bound together
and dependent, at certain times, on circumstance
and context, p. 163. The convictions of your
heart and the actual contents of your thoughts
are less important, in the end, in guiding your
actions than the immediate context of your
behavior, p. 165. True in extreme
situations? True in work situations? True in
personal situations?
8The Rules of The Tipping Point
- Making an idea or attitude or product tip can be
done through the influence of special kinds of
people. Thats the Law of the Few. - It can be done by changing the content of
communication, by making a message so memorable
that it sticks in someones mind and compels them
to action. That is the Stickiness Factor. - But we need to remember that small changes in
context can be just as important in tipping
epidemics. Ch. 4
9Change Agents
- Rosa Parks
- Martin Luther King Jr.
- Connectors
- Mavens
- Salesmen
10Changees
- Seed Corn, TP, p. 197
- Innovators
- adventurous
- Early adopters
- opinion leaders
- Early majority
- big companies
- Late majority
- these 2 deliberate skeptical mass
- Laggards
- stragglers
- Cheese
- Sniff
- Scurry
- Haw
- Hem
11Connectors, Mavens, Salesmen
- They are the translators
- They take ideas from innovators and get them
understood and accepted by the masses - To make an idea contagious, they level it,
dropping extra details and exaggerating other
details to give more meaning to the message
12Contagion and Stickiness
- Contagiousness is in larger part a function of
the messenger - Stickiness is primarily a property of the
message, p. 234
13Smoking vs. Suicide
- Young people will experiment.
- But you cant experiment with suicide once is
all it takes. - Paying attention to the tipping points of the
addiction process can lead to a less sticky form
of smoking (nicotine threshold, depression, lure
of who smokes).
14Diabetes and Breast Cancer
- Change the context from Black churches to beauty
salons - Change the messenger to a long-term friend, the
stylist - Change the message to stories.
15Lessons of the Tipping Point
- Starting epidemics requires concentrating
resources on a few key areas. - Concentrate resources on connectors, mavens, and
salesmen (Law of the Few) p. 255-256.
16Lessons of the Tipping Point
- The world does not accord with our intuition. We
are powerfully influenced by our surroundings,
our immediate context, and the personalities of
those around us p. 258-259. - With the slightest push in just the right place,
the world can be tipped p. 259.
17Afterword
- Isolation (Columbine)
- Immunity (email?)
- Finding mavens is difficult