When Bruhn and Wolf first presented their findings to the medical community, you can imagine the kind of skepticism they faced. They went to conferences where their peers were presenting long rows of data arrayed in complex charts and referring to this kind of gene or that kind of physiological process, and they themselves were talking instead about the mysterious and magical benefits of people stopping to talk to one another on the street and of having three generations under one roof. Living a long life, the conventional wisdom at the time said, depended to a great extent on who we were—that is, our genes. It depended on the decisions we made—on what we chose to eat, and how much we chose to exercise, and how effectively we were treated by the medical system. No one was used to thinking about health in terms of
community
.
Wolf and Bruhn had to convince the medical establishment to think about health and heart attacks in an entirely new way: they had to get them to realize that they wouldn’t be able to understand why someone was healthy if all they did was think about an individual’s personal choices or actions in isolation. They had to look
beyond
the individual. They had to understand the culture he or she was a part of, and who their friends and families were, and what town their families came from. They had to appreciate the idea that the values of the world we inhabit and the people we surround ourselves with have a profound effect on who we are.
In
Outliers,
I want to do for our understanding of success what Stewart Wolf did for our understanding of health.
OPPORTUNITY
The Matthew Effect
“FOR UNTO EVERYONE THAT HATH SHALL BE GIVEN, AND HE SHALL HAVE ABUNDANCE. BUT FROM HIM THAT HATH NOT SHALL BE TAKEN AWAY EVEN THAT WHICH HE HATH.”
—
MATTHEW
25:29
1.
One warm, spring day in May of 2007, the Medicine Hat Tigers and the Vancouver Giants met for the Memorial Cup hockey championships in Vancouver, British Columbia. The Tigers and the Giants were the two finest teams in the Canadian Hockey League, which in turn is the finest junior hockey league in the world. These were the future stars of the sport—seventeen, eighteen, and nineteen-year-olds who had been skating and shooting pucks since they were barely more than toddlers.
The game was broadcast on Canadian national television. Up and down the streets of downtown Vancouver, Memorial Cup banners hung from the lampposts. The arena was packed. A long red carpet was rolled out on the ice, and the announcer introduced the game’s dignitaries. First came the premier of British Columbia, Gordon Campbell. Then, amid tumultuous applause, out walked Gordie Howe, one of the legends of the game. “Ladies and gentlemen,” the announcer boomed. “Mr. Hockey!”
For the next sixty minutes, the two teams played spirited, aggressive hockey. Vancouver scored first, early in the second period, on a rebound by Mario Bliznak. Late in the second period, it was Medicine Hat’s turn, as the team’s scoring leader, Darren Helm, fired a quick shot past Vancouver’s goalie, Tyson Sexsmith. Vancouver answered in the third period, scoring the game’s deciding goal, and then, when Medicine Hat pulled its goalie in desperation, Vancouver scored a third time.
In the aftermath of the game, the players and their families and sports reporters from across the country crammed into the winning team’s locker room. The air was filled with cigar smoke and the smell of champagne and sweat-soaked hockey gear. On the wall was a hand-painted banner: “Embrace the Struggle.” In the center of the room the Giants’ coach, Don Hay, stood misty-eyed. “I’m just so proud of these guys,” he said. “Just look around the locker room. There isn’t one guy who didn’t buy in wholeheartedly.”
Canadian hockey is a meritocracy. Thousands of Canadian boys begin to play the sport at the “novice” level, before they are even in kindergarten. From that point on, there are leagues for every age class, and at each of those levels, the players are sifted and sorted and evaluated, with the most talented separated out and groomed for the next level. By the time players reach their midteens, the very best of the best have been channeled into an elite league known as Major Junior A, which is the top of the pyramid. And if your Major Junior A team plays for the Memorial Cup, that means you are at the very top of the top of the pyramid.
This is the way most sports pick their future stars. It’s the way soccer is organized in Europe and South America, and it’s the way Olympic athletes are chosen. For that matter, it is not all that different from the way the world of classical music picks its future virtuosos, or the way the world of ballet picks its future ballerinas, or the way our elite educational system picks its future scientists and intellectuals.
You can’t buy your way into Major Junior A hockey. It doesn’t matter who your father or mother is, or who your grandfather was, or what business your family is in. Nor does it matter if you live in the most remote corner of the most northerly province in Canada. If you have ability, the vast network of hockey scouts and talent spotters will find you, and if you are willing to work to develop that ability, the system will reward you. Success in hockey is based on
individual merit
—and both of those words are important. Players are judged on their own performance, not on anyone else’s, and on the basis of their ability, not on some other arbitrary fact.
Or are they?
2.
This is a book about outliers, about men and women who do things that are out of the ordinary. Over the course of the chapters ahead, I’m going to introduce you to one kind of outlier after another: to geniuses, business tycoons, rock stars, and software programmers. We’re going to uncover the secrets of a remarkable lawyer, look at what separates the very best pilots from pilots who have crashed planes, and try to figure out why Asians are so good at math. And in examining the lives of the remarkable among us—the skilled, the talented, and the driven—I will argue that there is something profoundly wrong with the way we make sense of success.
What is the question we always ask about the successful? We want to know what they’re
like
—what kind of personalities they have, or how intelligent they are, or what kind of lifestyles they have, or what special talents they might have been born with. And we assume that it is those personal qualities that explain how that individual reached the top.
In the autobiographies published every year by the billionaire/entrepreneur/rock star/celebrity, the story line is always the same: our hero is born in modest circumstances and by virtue of his own grit and talent fights his way to greatness. In the Bible, Joseph is cast out by his brothers and sold into slavery and then rises to become the pharaoh’s right-hand man on the strength of his own brilliance and insight. In the famous nineteenth-century novels of Horatio Alger, young boys born into poverty rise to riches through a combination of pluck and initiative. “I think overall it’s a disadvantage,” Jeb Bush once said of what it meant for his business career that he was the son of an American president and the brother of an American president and the grandson of a wealthy Wall Street banker and US senator. When he ran for governor of Florida, he repeatedly referred to himself as a “self-made man,” and it is a measure of how deeply we associate success with the efforts of the individual that few batted an eye at that description.
“Lift up your heads,” Robert Winthrop told the crowd many years ago at the unveiling of a statue of that great hero of American independence Benjamin Franklin, “and look at the image of a man who rose from nothing, who owed nothing to parentage or patronage, who enjoyed no advantages of early education which are not open—a hundredfold open—to yourselves, who performed the most menial services in the businesses in which his early life was employed, but who lived to stand before Kings, and died to leave a name which the world will never forget.”
In
Outliers
, I want to convince you that these kinds of personal explanations of success don’t work. People don’t rise from nothing. We do owe something to parentage and patronage. The people who stand before kings may look like they did it all by themselves. But in fact they are invariably the beneficiaries of hidden advantages and extraordinary opportunities and cultural legacies that allow them to learn and work hard and make sense of the world in ways others cannot. It makes a difference where and when we grew up. The culture we belong to and the legacies passed down by our forebears shape the patterns of our achievement in ways we cannot begin to imagine. It’s not enough to ask what successful people are like, in other words. It is only by asking where they are
from
that we can unravel the logic behind who succeeds and who doesn’t.
Biologists often talk about the “ecology” of an organism: the tallest oak in the forest is the tallest not just because it grew from the hardiest acorn; it is the tallest also because no other trees blocked its sunlight, the soil around it was deep and rich, no rabbit chewed through its bark as a sapling, and no lumberjack cut it down before it matured. We all know that successful people come from hardy seeds. But do we know enough about the sunlight that warmed them, the soil in which they put down the roots, and the rabbits and lumberjacks they were lucky enough to avoid? This is not a book about tall trees. It’s a book about forests—and hockey is a good place to start because the explanation for who gets to the top of the hockey world is a lot more interesting and complicated than it looks. In fact, it’s downright peculiar.
3.
Here is the player roster of the 2007 Medicine Hat Tigers. Take a close look and see if you can spot anything strange about it.
No. | Name | Pos. | L/R | Height | Weight | Birth Date | Hometown |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
9 | Brennan Bosch | C | R | 5′8″ | 173 | Feb. 14, 1988 | Martensville, SK |
11 | Scott Wasden | C | R | 6′1″ | 188 | Jan. 4, 1988 | Westbank, BC |
12 | Colton Grant | LW | L | 5′9″ | 177 | Mar. 20, 1989 | Standard, AB |
14 | Darren Helm | LW | L | 6′ | 182 | Jan. 21, 1987 | St. Andrews, MB |
15 | Derek Dorsett | RW | L | 5′11″ | 178 | Dec. 20, 1986 | Kindersley, SK |
16 | Daine Todd | C | R | 5′10″ | 173 | Jan. 10, 1987 | Red Deer, AB |
17 | Tyler Swystun | RW | R | 5′11″ | 185 | Jan. 15, 1988 | Cochrane, AB |
19 | Matt Lowry | C | R | 6′ | 186 | Mar. 2, 1988 | Neepawa, MB |
20 | Kevin Undershute | LW | L | 6′ | 178 | Apr. 12, 1987 | Medicine Hat, AB |
21 | Jerrid Sauer | RW | R | 5′10″ | 196 | Sep. 12, 1987 | Medicine Hat, AB |
22 | Tyler Ennis | C | L | 5′9″ | 160 | Oct. 6, 1989 | Edmonton, AB |
23 | Jordan Hickmott | C | R | 6′ | 183 | Apr. 11, 1990 | Mission, BC |
25 | Jakub Rumpel | RW | R | 5′8″ | 166 | Jan. 27, 1987 | Hrnciarovce, SLO |
28 | Bretton Cameron | C | R | 5′11″ | 168 | Jan. 26, 1989 | Didsbury, AB |
36 | Chris Stevens | LW | L | 5′10″ | 197 | Aug. 20, 1986 | Dawson Creek, BC |
3 | Gord Baldwin | D | L | 6′5″ | 205 | Mar. 1, 1987 | Winnipeg, MB |
4 | David Schlemko | D | L | 6′1″ | 195 | May 7, 1987 | Edmonton, AB |
5 | Trever Glass | D | L | 6′ | 190 | Jan. 22, 1988 | Cochrane, AB |
10 | Kris Russell | D | L | 5′10″ | 177 | May 2, 1987 | Caroline, AB |
18 | Michael Sauer | D | R | 6′3″ | 205 | Aug. 7, 1987 | Sartell, MN |
24 | Mark Isherwood | D | R | 6′ | 183 | Jan. 31, 1989 | Abbotsford, BC |
27 | Shayne Brown | D | L | 6′1″ | 198 | Feb. 20, 1989 | Stony Plain, AB |
29 | Jordan Bendfeld | D | R | 6′3″ | 230 | Feb. 9, 1988 | Leduc, AB |
31 | Ryan Holfeld | G | L | 5′11″ | 166 | Jun. 29, 1989 | LeRoy, SK |
33 | Matt Keetley | G | R | 6′2″ | 189 | Apr. 27, 1986 | Medicine Hat, AB |
Do you see it? Don’t feel bad if you don’t, because for many years in the hockey world no one did. It wasn’t until the mid-1980s, in fact, that a Canadian psychologist named Roger Barnsley first drew attention to the phenomenon of relative age.