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The Tipping Point
Introduction · 1.5 min · 1 of 8

The Three Rules of Epidemics

A chapter summary from The Tipping Point by Malcolm Gladwell.

Gladwell opens with the puzzle of why some ideas, products, and behaviors spread like viruses while others, often objectively better, never tip into mass adoption.

— From The Tipping Point by Malcolm Gladwell

Gladwell opens with the puzzle of why some ideas, products, and behaviors spread like viruses while others, often objectively better, never tip into mass adoption. The book's central claim is that social epidemics behave the way biological ones do: most spread is invisible until a single small change crosses a threshold, after which the curve goes vertical. The threshold is the tipping point.

Three rules organize the book. The Law of the Few says that the spreading is done by a small number of socially-unusual people. The Stickiness Factor says the message itself must be designed to be remembered and acted upon. The Power of Context says the conditions surrounding the message determine whether it catches at all. All three operate simultaneously; missing any one stalls the curve before it tips.

The framing rejects the common intuition that big social changes require big causes. The 1990s drop in New York City crime, Hush Puppies' sudden return, the runaway success of Sesame Street, the Paul Revere ride versus William Dawes's identical ride that no one remembers — all are cases where small inputs produced disproportionate outputs once the three rules aligned.

Read this opening as the lens for everything that follows. Gladwell's argument is not that tipping points are mysterious; it's that they are predictable once you know what to look for. The rest of the book is a catalog of what to look for, with cases sharp enough that you'll start spotting the pattern in your own work within a week.

Gladwell frames the entire book around three rules that govern how social epidemics tip. The Law of the Few holds that the spread of any idea depends overwhelmingly on a small number of exceptional people — the messengers. The Stickiness Factor concerns the message itself, which must be memorable and compelling enough that people act on it and pass it along. The Power of Context argues that human behavior is acutely sensitive to the conditions and circumstances of the moment, so that small environmental changes can flip behavior on a mass scale. Underlying all three is the epidemic's defining feature: change is not gradual and proportional but contagious, driven by a few causes that exert outsized leverage, and culminating in one dramatic moment when the curve goes vertical — the tipping point. Gladwell previews the cases that recur throughout, from the inexplicable revival of Hush Puppies shoes to the sudden 1990s collapse of New York crime, to make his central, hopeful claim: once you understand the mechanics of tipping, you can deliberately start desirable epidemics and halt destructive ones with surprisingly small, well-placed interventions.

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The Law of the Few: Connectors, Mavens, and Salesmen
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