TIP024: HOW TO BECOME AN OUTLIER – A SUMMARY OF MALCOLM GLADWELL’S BOOK

W/ PRESTON & STIG

22 February 2015

In this episode, Preston and Stig provide an overview of the book Outliers, which is an account of how Malcolm Gladwell attributes enormous success to well-known people in our society.

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IN THIS EPISODE, YOU’LL LEARN:

  • Who is Malcolm Gladwell and what is the book Outliers about?
  • Is Bill Gates just lucky?
  • Can your birthday predict your success?
  • Ask the Investors: Investing recommendations for a college student

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TRANSCRIPT

Disclaimer: The transcript that follows has been generated using artificial intelligence. We strive to be as accurate as possible, but minor errors and slightly off timestamps may be present due to platform differences.

Preston Pysh  1:02  

All right, here we go, Stig. So this is Episode 24 of The Investor’s Podcast and I’m your host Preston Pysh. I’m accompanied by my co-host Stig Brodersen, out in Denmark. And today we’ve got another episode for you. This one was a book that Stig and I had read and where we got the source for this book was, we saw a recommendation from Charlie Munger. 

For anybody who doesn’t know who Charlie Munger is, he’s the vice chairman of Berkshire Hathaway and he’s Warren Buffett’s, basically, number two man in the organization. The two of them have run Berkshire Hathaway for decades. 

So whenever Charlie says something, and for anybody who knows Charlie Munger, they know he’s extremely bright. Just an extraordinarily bright person. And so one of his book recommendations back in 2009, he was at this WESTCO annual meeting. WESTCO’s company is out in the Pittsburgh area, but he made this recommendation to read Malcolm Gladwell’s book, ‘Outliers’ and he made that announcement to the attendees of the meeting. The book is all about the story of success. 

And in this book, Gladwell tries to figure out, why do some people like Bill Gates get to the point that he’s at? How does he get there? What were the elements that led to his success? And so, Gladwell kind of does an outline of different people like Bill Gates and the Beatles, and just a bunch of different people, and how they ended up where they’re at today. 

And so, what we’re going to do is we’re going to break down the book for you. We’re just going to go through and just kind of give you a cliff notes version of what we’ve captured out of the book. And this book was broken into two different sections. Gladwell starts off with part one, which I think was four chapters, and that was ‘Opportunity’. And then in the second half of the book, he labeled that ‘Legacy’. And so, we’ll talk about the subordinate pieces that fit into those two parts of the book. 

So, the book starts off and it was pretty interesting. It starts off with this idea of the Matthew effect. The Matthew effect actually comes from the Bible on the chapters of Matthew, and the quote that he pulled out of there is, ‘For everyone that shall be given and have, he shall have abundance. But for him who have not shall be taken away, even that which he has’. And that quote right there, is how he starts off one of the chapters here at the very beginning of this Opportunity section. 

And so, he then jumps to hockey in Canada, which was kind of an odd start to the book, but it was a very fascinating start. And he talks about how there’s enormous outliers for these children playing hockey up in Canada. I personally have a connection to this because my sister lives up in Canada, she lives in Calgary. She married a Canadian and moved up there. I’ve heard about this before reading the book. But I think for anybody who’s not intimately familiar with Canada and how hockey works up there, you might find this very fascinating. So I’m going to have Stig describe the overall story of this hockey up in Canada and how it relates to outliers.

Stig Brodersen  4:08  

Yeah, because it seems like one of the advantages that some hockey players have is when they’re born. What Gladwell did was, look into all the birthdays of the most successful hockey players. And what he found was that 40% had birthdays in January, February, March, so that’s the first 3 months. And if you compare that to the last 3 months, it was only 10% of them that had birthdays there. So that was something that really surprised me.

Preston Pysh  4:36  

So the thing that I found really interesting with this hockey example  up in Canada, is the critical variable is the 31st of December. It’s because after the 31st of December and you go into the new year, the first of January, that’s the cutoff date that they have for these kids if they’re playing. 

So if you’re 8 years old and you were born on one January, you have an enormous advantage over a kid who was born one day earlier, the 31st of December. And the advantage is that you’re going to be bigger, you’re going to be stronger, you’re going to be competing with that kid who’s basically a year behind you, because the kid who would have been born a day before, he’s in a completely different leg. 

And so what he talks about, because this kid is born at the beginning of the year, and he’s in that other leg, he has the ability to get bigger. He then has access to better coaches because maybe he was performing better, and it has this compounding impact. And so, what was really interesting in the book is that Gladwell talks about how that compounding impact, people would think by the time they’re 12 or 14, that’s going to go away. 

But Gladwell shows in the book through statistics that it doesn’t go away. And by the time they’re 18 years old, this separation in these outlier factors still applies because it had this compounding impact over time. Stig, I saw you had something you want to add.

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