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Made to Stick
Chapter 2 · 1.5 min · 2 of 7

Unexpected

A chapter summary from Made to Stick by Chip Heath & Dan Heath.

The practical move is to identify the audience's default expectation about your topic and design your opening to break it.

— From Made to Stick by Chip Heath & Dan Heath

Attention is the gating resource for any communication. The Heaths argue that ideas stick when they break the audience's existing pattern — when the schema the audience was running gets interrupted by something the schema did not predict. Surprise opens the door; what enters the door has a chance.

The mechanism is grounded in cognitive science. The brain runs predictive models constantly; when a model produces an accurate prediction, attention can disengage. When the model fails — when something unexpected happens — attention engages because the model needs updating. The communicator who designs surprise is exploiting this attentional reflex.

The chapter's craft lesson is that surprise alone is not enough. Cheap surprise (random shock, gratuitous trivia) breaks the schema without supplying anything to replace it; the audience moves on. Productive surprise breaks the schema and offers a better one. Audiences leave with an updated model, not just a startled moment.

The practical move is to identify the audience's default expectation about your topic and design your opening to break it. The energy released in the gap between expected and actual is the energy that carries the rest of your message into long-term memory.

Attention is the gating resource, and the Heaths argue that ideas seize it by breaking the audience's existing mental pattern — surprising them by violating the schema their brain was quietly running. Surprise works because the mind is a prediction machine; when a prediction fails, attention snaps to the anomaly. But surprise only opens the door, and to keep the audience inside they turn to George Loewenstein's gap theory of curiosity: interest is sustained by opening a gap in the audience's knowledge that they now feel compelled to close, the way a good mystery makes you need the answer. They illustrate with the famous Nordstrom service legends, with public-service campaigns engineered around a jolt, and with advertising that deliberately defies expectation to make a point stick. The essential caution is that surprise must serve the core rather than be a gimmick for its own sake — a shocking image unrelated to the message buys attention and wastes it. The practical method is to identify the genuinely counterintuitive part of your idea, break the audience's guessing machine with it, and then deploy a curiosity gap to hold the attention that the surprise has won. The Heaths summarize the sequence as breaking a pattern to earn the glance and opening a gap to earn the dwell, so that attention, once captured, is spent on the idea's core rather than squandered on the novelty that captured it.

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