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Made to Stick: Why Some Ideas Survive and Others Die Hardcover – January 2, 2007

4.6 out of 5 stars 5,130 ratings

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NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • The instant classic about why some ideas thrive, why others die, and how to make your ideas stick.

“Anyone interested in influencing others—to buy, to vote, to learn, to diet, to give to charity or to start a revolution—can learn from this book.”—The Washington Post
 
Mark Twain once observed, “A lie can get halfway around the world before the truth can even get its boots on.” His observation rings true: Urban legends, conspiracy theories, and bogus news stories circulate effortlessly. Meanwhile, people with important ideas—entrepreneurs, teachers, politicians, and journalists—struggle to make them “stick.” 

In
Made to Stick, Chip and Dan Heath reveal the anatomy of ideas that stick and explain ways to make ideas stickier, such as applying the human scale principle, using the Velcro Theory of Memory, and creating curiosity gaps. Along the way, we discover that sticky messages of all kinds—from the infamous “kidney theft ring” hoax to a coach’s lessons on sportsmanship to a vision for a new product at Sony—draw their power from the same six traits.

Made to Stick will transform the way you communicate. It’s a fast-paced tour of success stories (and failures): the Nobel Prize-winning scientist who drank a glass of bacteria to prove a point about stomach ulcers; the charities who make use of the Mother Teresa Effect; the elementary-school teacher whose simulation actually prevented racial prejudice.
 
Provocative, eye-opening, and often surprisingly funny,
Made to Stick shows us the vital principles of winning ideas—and tells us how we can apply these rules to making our own messages stick.
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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Starred Review. Unabashedly inspired by Malcolm Gladwell's bestselling The Tipping Point, the brothers Heath—Chip a professor at Stanford's business school, Dan a teacher and textbook publisher—offer an entertaining, practical guide to effective communication. Drawing extensively on psychosocial studies on memory, emotion and motivation, their study is couched in terms of "stickiness"—that is, the art of making ideas unforgettable. They start by relating the gruesome urban legend about a man who succumbs to a barroom flirtation only to wake up in a tub of ice, victim of an organ-harvesting ring. What makes such stories memorable and ensures their spread around the globe? The authors credit six key principles: simplicity, unexpectedness, concreteness, credibility, emotions and stories. (The initial letters spell out "success"—well, almost.) They illustrate these principles with a host of stories, some familiar (Kennedy's stirring call to "land a man on the moon and return him safely to the earth" within a decade) and others very funny (Nora Ephron's anecdote of how her high school journalism teacher used a simple, embarrassing trick to teach her how not to "bury the lead"). Throughout the book, sidebars show how bland messages can be made intriguing. Fun to read and solidly researched, this book deserves a wide readership. (Jan. 16)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From School Library Journal

Adult/High School—While at first glance this volume might resemble the latest in a series of trendy business advice books, ultimately it is about storytelling, and it is a how-to for crafting a compelling narrative. Employing a lighthearted tone, the Heaths apply those selfsame techniques to create an enjoyable read. They analyze such narratives as urban legends and advertisements to discover what makes them memorable. The authors provide a simple mnemonic to remember their stickiness formula, and the basic principles may be applied in any situation where persuasiveness is an asset. The book is a fast read peppered with exercises to test the techniques proposed. Some examples act as pop quizzes and engage readers in moments of self-reflection. The book draws on examples from teachers, scientists, and soldiers who have been successful at crafting memorable ideas, from the well-known blue eye/brown eye exercise conducted by an Iowa elementary school teacher as an experiential lesson in prejudice following the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr., to conversations among Xerox repairmen. Readers who enjoyed Malcolm Gladwell's Blink (2005) and The Tipping Point (2000, both Little, Brown) will appreciate this clever take on contemporary culture.—Heidi Dolamore, San Mateo County Library, CA
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Random House
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ January 2, 2007
  • Edition ‏ : ‎ First Edition
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 336 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1400064287
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1400064281
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 2.31 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 5.75 x 1.11 x 8.53 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.6 out of 5 stars 5,130 ratings

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Customer reviews

4.6 out of 5 stars
5,130 global ratings

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Customers say

Customers find this book highly readable and well-written, with valuable insights and a useful checklist for creating successful ideas. The book excels in storytelling, particularly in teaching how to tell compelling stories, and customers appreciate how it draws audiences in with emotional impact. Customers praise its material quality, entertainment value through real-life examples, and its ability to make ideas understandable and memorable.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

555 customers mention "Readability"519 positive36 negative

Customers find the book highly readable and reasonably well-written, with one customer noting that the vocabulary is simple and another mentioning it's a must-read for those in client-facing roles.

"...The book is even greater because the authors, Chip and Dan Heath, apply their SUCCESs theory onto practical situation to help readers understand..." Read more

"...people who know and use these principles are more successful in communicating through advertisements than those who are talented in making..." Read more

"This book is very easy to read and uses a lot of research to make points. If your interesting in this topic you should check this book out!" Read more

"...chapter is devoted to each principle with the authors providing context for clarity and understanding, examples, and tools to guide the development..." Read more

454 customers mention "Insight"448 positive6 negative

Customers find the book insightful and educational, appreciating its fundamental ideas and usefulness as a reference. One customer notes how it establishes a new way of thinking.

"...also presents a lot of stories to deliver and to help readers understand in each chapter, stories allow people to understand how your idea can..." Read more

"...I also liked the reference guide on pages 252-257 that outlines the book's contents...." Read more

"...Don’t get me wrong: The concepts were good and sound, but it read more like a normal business book rather than reaching the high bar these two have..." Read more

"This book is very easy to read and uses a lot of research to make points. If your interesting in this topic you should check this book out!" Read more

137 customers mention "Story quality"129 positive8 negative

Customers find the stories in the book interesting and compelling, with one customer noting that they are better than facts and figures.

"...Like the book, Made to Stick, also presents a lot of stories to deliver and to help readers understand in each chapter, stories allow people to..." Read more

"...(information is more memorable and meaningful in a story form . . . like the urban legend that opens the book)..." Read more

"...The Healths provide what they view are the three basic story plots – the Challenge Plot, The Connection Plot, and the Creativity Plot...." Read more

"A "Simple Unexpected Concrete Credentialed Emotional Story" according to the book ‘Made to Stick’ by Chip Heath and Dan Heath...." Read more

96 customers mention "Stickiness"89 positive7 negative

Customers appreciate how the book's ideas stick with readers, noting that the content is understandable and resonates with audiences, with one customer describing it as a creative communication guide.

"...Like the book, Made to Stick, also presents a lot of stories to deliver and to help readers understand in each chapter, stories allow people to..." Read more

"...So clearly Made to Stick is sticking with me...." Read more

"...Sticky” ideas are understandable, memorable, and effective in changing thought or behavior...." Read more

"I don’t usually write reviews of books, even good ones, but Made to Stick is so good I feel the need to make an exception...." Read more

52 customers mention "Material quality"52 positive0 negative

Customers praise the book's material quality, describing it as solid, credible, and lasting.

"...According to the book, your ideas must simple, unexpected, concrete, credible, emotional, and stories...." Read more

"...4. Credibility..." Read more

"...Stories play a key role in making ideas sticky - they’re concrete, credible and more memorable than straight facts: ‘facts tell, stories sell’...." Read more

"...--Concrete: Compared to the aforementioned aspects, concreteness is easier to carry out...." Read more

34 customers mention "Emotional appeal"34 positive0 negative

Customers appreciate the book's emotional appeal, as it draws people in and holds their attention, with one customer noting how it connects to readers' real lives and another mentioning its ability to move audiences to take action.

"...to the book, your ideas must simple, unexpected, concrete, credible, emotional, and stories. Try to apply these rules into your next presentation...." Read more

"...5. Incite Emotions in Listeners..." Read more

"...to speak more authentically and forcefully, with greater resonance for my readership and clients...." Read more

"...And one of the best emotional appeals is self-interest: ("Acting on climate change now could save our ass.")..." Read more

33 customers mention "Entertainment value"33 positive0 negative

Customers find the book entertaining, particularly appreciating its real-life examples and humor.

"...It's filled with entertaining real-life examples, applicable research and quick interactive "try it yourself" exercises that keep you turning the..." Read more

"...The book is an easy-to-absorb reading and entertaining at the same time. The premise of the book is that we can learn to create sticky ideas...." Read more

"This is an amazing book. Not only is it easy to read, convincing, and enjoyable, it focuses on an incredibly important topic for todays society:..." Read more

"...On the positive side this makes it highly readable and entertaining...." Read more

30 customers mention "Concreteness"30 positive0 negative

Customers appreciate the book's concreteness, with one noting that it is easier to carry out.

"...According to the book, your ideas must simple, unexpected, concrete, credible, emotional, and stories...." Read more

"...3. Concreteness (the more dimensions of details the more hooks our minds use to create a memory) 4...." Read more

"...• Concreteness – You must help people understand and remember. Don’t use abstractions. Make your core idea concrete...." Read more

"...Stories play a key role in making ideas sticky - they’re concrete, credible and more memorable than straight facts: ‘facts tell, stories sell’...." Read more

Had to get the hard copy
5 out of 5 stars
Had to get the hard copy
I first purchased the audible version and it was so good that I had to purchase a hard copy to add to my collection. Simple, solid ideas to help you enforce important messages and behavior.
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Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on October 10, 2011
    The SUCCESs. Not the word that counts its literal meaning, but that invisible, intangible theory where we are able to express, deliver, and stick ideas to others. In this revealing book, you will be introduced to the six ingredients designed specifically to make ideas sticky, and let me deliver what I caught from this eye-opening book.

    Others may experience over time they develop habits that slowly erode their mind's sensitivity. The inevitable pain and disappointment of moments such as delivering your ideas at a business meeting or a conference have caused you to set up walls around your mind. Much of this is understandable. But, there's no way around the truth: your mind is out of tune with confidence it was created to maintain. As we live in community, communication is the way for us to feel the unity. The book is even greater because the authors, Chip and Dan Heath, apply their SUCCESs theory onto practical situation to help readers understand more clearly. Without the SUCCESs rule, some kinds of communications might ease our conscience temporarily but would do nothing to expose the deeper secrets we carry and deliver. And, it might be the secrets that keep our minds in turmoil. Worse, this kind of communication could actually fuel destructive behavior rather than curb it. The rules the authors explain in this book might seem the things you would feel that you already know. But, these are the things you could easily ignore. The book is a great reference to keep you on succeeding the efficient deliverability of your ideas.

    Chapter summary
    Chapter1: Simple
    When you needed to deliver your message in a brief and compact way, how would you prepare to deliver it to your audiences or readers? Simplicity is the key and first step to make a message sticky to others. Making it simple does not mean that you need to bring out your most important idea. It is critical to find the core. According to the authors, "finding the core isn't synonymous with communicating the core." But, that simplicity must come with its value. Like the metaphor of a company for the employees to be encouraged, your message needs to be simple and important to make your message remain not just in your mind but others as well.

    Chapter2: Unexpected
    "We can't demand attention. We must attract it" says the authors in the book. In order to grab people's attention, your message may be attractive with unexpectedness. Breaking a pattern could be one way. For example, the old emergency siren was too monotonic to stimulate our sensory systems and therefore failing to attract our attention. As the siren gets systematically and audibly improved, people hear much brighter and more stimulating sound and therefore being aware of some situation. In order to catch people's attention, you need to break the ordinary patterns. According to the book, "Our brain is designed to keenly aware of changes." The more you learn knowledge, the greater the knowledge gap you would get. Because we sometimes tend to perceive that we know everything, it's hard to glue the gap. However, curiosity comes from the knowledge gaps, so these knowledge gaps can be interesting.
    Chapter3: Concrete
    Humans can hallucinate and imagine what we've experienced in visual, audible, or any other sensory pathways. When we use all our sensory systems to visualize ideas or messages, then the ideas get much more concrete. As an example the authors provide in this chapter, "a bathtub full of ice" in the Kidney Theft legend is an example of abstract moral truths that makes it concrete.

    Chapter4: Credible
    When you are a scientist, you believe more in the things that are scientifically proven or that are referred to many other studies or to the words or the theories that the well-known scientist has established. That much, credibility makes or deceives people believe your ideas. Both authorities and antiauthorities work. We present results, charts, statistics, pictures and other data to make people believe. "But concrete details don't just lend credibility to the authorities who provide them; they lend credibility to the idea itself."

    Chapter5: Emotional
    What's in it for you? It is a good example of the power of association. Sometimes, we need to grab people's emotion. It does not mean tear jerking, dramatic, or romantic. It means that your idea must pull out people's care and attachment to it. However, we don't always have to create this emotional attachment. "In fact, many ideas use a sort of piggybacking strategy, associating themselves with emotions that already exist (Made to Stick)." People can make decisions based on two models: the consequence model and the identity model. The consequence model can be rational self-interest, while the identity model is that people identify such situations like what type of situation is this?

    Chapter6: Stories
    Have you seen and heard the story of the college student from the Subway campaign? He's the guy who lost hundreds of pounds eating Subway sandwiches. The story inspires people and even connects to people's real life. Like the book, Made to Stick, also presents a lot of stories to deliver and to help readers understand in each chapter, stories allow people to understand how your idea can affect or change their mind.

    Close the book and think for a moment before you start reading. How are things with your mind? Chances are, you've never stopped to consider your mind. Why should you? There are interviews to prepare for, meetings to blow others' mind with your amazing ideas, and moments you need to bring up emotional attachment with your family or your friends. If you are all caught up with these things and ask yourself this, "how are things?" "How have I dealt with those situations?" Before you go reading, you first need to dispel a commonly held myth about communication. You need to understand your old habits would die hard. And, like any habit that goes unchecked, over time they come to keep disturbing you to make your ideas sticky. Try to use the clinic part in each chapter. It will enhance your understandings, and you will improve your skills to make your ideas survive. If you really want to understand much deeper, as you read the book, look up some informative articles about the anatomy and physiology of the brain. It will help you. According to the book, your ideas must simple, unexpected, concrete, credible, emotional, and stories. Try to apply these rules into your next presentation. I was not a good organized speaker. When I adjusted my mind with these rules to prepare my presentation recently, an amazing thing happened. I am the leader of the young adult ministry of a small local church. At almost every meeting, I needed to make the members understand what and why we need to awaken ourselves and other people; they barely paid attention to what I was saying. Even they seemed understanding, but once they returned to their home or to their life, they forgot what I emphasized. However, with the rules I learned from the book, the members started showing their interests in what I say and paying good attention to it. It works!

    Part of our confusion in delivering ideas stems from a misapplication of the rules we think we already know for persuasions. The notion that all confusions can be reduced down to a single underlying problem may strike you as a case of oversimplification. However, with the book, Made to Stick, you will track and be ready for your next presentation. When I was looking for a neuroscience book, Made to Stick was one of the recommended books related to neuroscience. The book is easy to follow, and it is really made to stick! If you are looking for a scientifically texted neuroscience book, this is not the book for you. However, this book will stir up your curiosity about neuroscience as a fundamental connector to higher neural knowledge. Simply, highly I recommend.
    26 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on February 13, 2007
    This is the best book about communications I've read since I discovered Stephen Denning's work on telling business stories. I highly recommend Made to Stick to all those who want to get their messages across in business more effectively.

    Imagine if people remembered what you had to say and acted on it. Wouldn't that be great? What if people not only remembered and acted, but told hundreds of others who also acted and told? Now you're really getting somewhere!

    Brothers Chip (an educational consultant and publisher) and Dan (a professor of organizational behavior at Stanford Business School) Heath combine to develop Malcolm Gladwell's point about "stickiness" in The Tipping Point. To help you understand what they have in mind, the book opens with the hoary urban tale of the man who ends up in a bathtub packed with ice missing his kidney after accepting a drink from a beautiful woman. That story, while untrue, has virtually universal awareness. Many other untrue stories do, too, especially those about what someone found in a fast food meal.

    The brothers Heath put memorable and quickly forgotten information side-by-side to make the case for six factors (in combination) making the difference between what's memorable and what isn't. The six factors are:

    1. Simplicity (any idea over one is too many)

    2. Unexpectedness (a surprise grabs our attention)

    3. Concreteness (the more dimensions of details the more hooks our minds use to create a memory)

    4. Credibility (even untrue stories don't stick unless there's a hint of truth, such as beware of what's too good to be true in the urban legend that opens the book)

    5. Incite Emotions in Listeners (we remember emotional experiences much more than anything else; we care more about individuals than groups; and we care about things that reflect our identities)

    6. Combine Messages in Stories (information is more memorable and meaningful in a story form . . . like the urban legend that opens the book)

    Before commenting on the book further, I have a confession to make. This book has special meaning for me. I was one of the first people to employ and popularize the term "Maximize Shareholder Value" by making that the title of my consulting firm's annual report (Mitchell and Company) over 25 years ago when we began our practice in stock-price improvement. That term has become almost ubiquitous in CEO and CFO suites, but hasn't gone very far beyond the discussions of corporate leaders, investment bankers and institutional investors and analysts.

    The authors use that term in the book as an example of a communication that hasn't stuck broadly. And they are right. Having watched that term over the years go into all kinds of unexpected places and be quoted by people who had no idea how to do it long ago convinced me of the wisdom of telling people what to do . . . not just what the objective is.

    The authors make this point beautifully in citing Southwest Airline's goal of being "THE low-fare airline." If something conflicts with being a good low-fare airline at Southwest, it's obvious to everybody not to do it.

    You'll probably find that some of the examples and lessons strike you right in the middle of the forehead, too. That's good. That's how we learn. I went back to a new manuscript I'm writing now and wrote a whole new beginning to better reflect the lessons in Made to Stick. I've also recommended the book already to about a dozen of my graduate business students. So clearly Made to Stick is sticking with me.

    If you find yourself skipping rapidly through the book, be sure to slow down and pay attention on pages 247-249 where the authors take common communications problems and recommend what to do about them (such as how to get people to pay attention to your message). That's the most valuable part of the book. It integrates the individual points very effectively and succinctly.

    I also liked the reference guide on pages 252-257 that outlines the book's contents. You won't need to take notes with this reference guide in place.

    So why should you pay attention? The authors demonstrate with an exercise that people who know and use these principles are more successful in communicating through advertisements than those who are talented in making advertisements but don't know these principles. Without more such experiments, it's hard to know how broad the principle is . . . but I'm willing to assume that they have a point here.

    No book is perfect: How could this one have been even better? Unlike Stephen Denning's wonderful books on storytelling, this book is more about the principles than how to apply the principles. I hope the authors will come back with many how-to books and workbooks.

    I would also like to commend the book's cover designer for doing such a good job of simulating a piece of duct tape on the dust jacket. That feature adds to the stickiness of this book.
    25 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on May 2, 2025
    Many business folk seek the one great idea that’ll transform the world and their bank accounts. They want to start a company or a product line to take them to the top or provide more stability. In our information age, however, ideas are everywhere; people able to push those ideas forward into beneficial, lasting change are harder to find. Leadership gurus (and brothers) Chip and Dan Heath seek to educate us about how to make our concepts “stick” around in the minds and lives of our listeners.

    In an age where authoritarian tendencies are seemingly flourishing, the Heath brothers offer a refreshing look at persuasion. They do so by pulling examples from dozens of different fields – all with the common theme of making lasting change. Obviously, you need a good idea, but most good ideas don’t morph into results without good rhetoric. They show us how to identify those story lines and narrative hooks in our own lines. Thus, at the proper time, we can pull out the proper push to inspire, challenge, or springboard our audience to reach new heights.

    I’ve appreciated both Chip Heath’s and Dan Heath’s writing in other domains, but I found this book not up to their usual standard. The examples are interesting, but the central, take-home message is weaker. The book dissected different ways people pitched ideas, but I finished the book without a lot of action items for my daily life and work. I guess you could say that the book itself didn’t have much “stickiness” for me. Don’t get me wrong: The concepts were good and sound, but it read more like a normal business book rather than reaching the high bar these two have set for themselves.
  • Reviewed in the United States on May 8, 2025
    This book is very easy to read and uses a lot of research to make points. If your interesting in this topic you should check this book out!

Top reviews from other countries

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  • Thomas Klein Middelink
    5.0 out of 5 stars Sticky
    Reviewed in the Netherlands on November 2, 2019
    This book will stick!
    Great examples to make the six key qualities of an idea that sticks, stickier.
    Also very suitable for re-reading over and over.
  • The Charismatic Nerd
    5.0 out of 5 stars Learn to be an excellent communicator in a week with this easy to read book.
    Reviewed in Canada on August 18, 2017
    Do you have trouble conveying your ideas? Life would be a lot better if you were able to communicate your ideas. But you stumble like English is a foreign language.

    Made to Stick will solve most of your communication problems. It clearly instructs the reader on how to properly convey their ideas. The read is simple and engaging. It's such a blast to read, considering that the topic is boring. After finishing this book, you're going to wish you had read this years ago.

    So if you have to give a presentation, write content, make educational videos, basically any scenario requiring you to convey your ideas. This book will help immensely.

    Don't wait any longer to buy this book, because it is absolutely worth the investment.
  • Isaac González Elizarrarás
    5.0 out of 5 stars Un super libro
    Reviewed in Mexico on February 19, 2024
    Me encantó, desde la introducción hasta el final, realmente te atrapa
    Report
  • Client d'Amazon
    5.0 out of 5 stars Livre passionnant et très didactique
    Reviewed in France on September 13, 2018
    Les américains sont très forts pour vulgariser les sujets scientifiques, sociologiques, économiques, et ils en font la preuve ici. Des exemples parlants, du concret pour comprendre les mécanismes derrière les idées les plus marquantes qui restent dans nos esprits. Une vraie aide pour apprendre à mieux communiquer et à faire passer un message au milieu du brouhaha d'information. Une invitation à réfléchir au coeur de notre message et à l'histoire qui saura lui donner vie. Bonne lecture à tous!
  • Familia S-R E
    5.0 out of 5 stars Fantástico
    Reviewed in Spain on November 16, 2022
    Muy buen libro sobre comunicación eficaz con ejemplos y casos prácticos en los que se "reparan" textos para que resulten de mayor impacto.