Malcolm Gladwell's Outliers

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Malcolm Gladwell, author of Outliers, gives the definition of an outlier to be “something that is situated away from or classified differently from a main or related body” (3). While he does supply this definition he never specifies what he defines as success. Using his numerous examples of what Gladwell considers to a successful person, it is safe to conclude that his definition would be – success is a mixture of opportunity, intelligence, and hard work. When these three characteristics are combined it equals great success, and cannot be reached with only one or two of these things, all three must be present. Gladwell presents multiple instances where these three qualities contribute to an individual’s success.
The first group of people Gladwell discusses is professional hockey players. He states that “Seventeen out of twenty-five players on the team were born in January, February, March and April” (23). These months hold great opportunity for the players since the cut-off date for hockey as children is January 1st; while the children born in the other months are smaller and not as coordinated the other children are bigger and have approximately nine months in growth on them, giving them the edge. Gladwell also examines the amount of time and work it takes to become a professional. Stating it takes 10,000 hours to reach this status of professionalism. The rule follows for the hockey players. “That late-born prodigy doesn’t get chosen for the all-star team as an eight-year-old because he’s too small… And without that extra practice, he has no chance at hitting ten thousand hours… without ten thousand hours… there is no way he can ever master the skills” (41). He is describing that since the players born in between ...

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... thirteen. Almost no children got this opportunity at his age and so he was also able to quickly get his 10,000 hours of practice with software and computers. “What truly distinguishes their histories is not their extraordinary talent but their extraordinary opportunities” (55). Both men were very smart, although not as much as Langan, but their mixture of opportunities, intelligence, and hard work led them to be much more successful than Langan.
Malcolm Gladwell is an extremely successful man himself, although he never directly states his definition of success, it is greatly implied that he believes it to be a combination of opportunity, intelligence, and hard work. Without these these three qualities person has an extremely low likelihood to become successful. His definition is shown in professional hockey players, Bill Joy, Bill gates, and many others.

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