The
Tipping Point: How Little Things Can Make a Big Difference
by Malcolm Gladwell
The
Three Rules of Epidemics
In the mid-1990s, the city of Baltimore was
attacked by an epidemic of syphilis. In the space of a year, from 1995 to
1996, the number of children born with the disease increased by 500
percent. If you look at Baltimore's syphilis rates on a graph, the line
runs straight for years and then, when it hits 1995, rises almost at a
right angle.
What caused Baltimore's syphilis problem to
tip? According to the Centers for Disease Control, the problem was crack
cocaine. Crack is known to cause a dramatic increase in the kind of risky
sexual behavior that leads to the spread of things like HIV and syphilis.
It brings far more people into poor areas to buy drugs, which then
increases the likelihood that they will take an infection home with them
to their own neighborhood. It changes the patterns of social connections
between neighborhoods. Crack, the CDC said, was the little push that the
syphilis problem needed to turn into a raging epidemic.
John Zenilman of Johns Hopkins University
in Baltimore, an expert on sexually transmitted diseases, has another
explanation: the breakdown of medical services in the city's poorest
neighborhoods. "In 1990-91, we had thirty-six thousand patient visits
at the city's sexually transmitted disease clinics," Zenilman says.
"Then the city decided to gradually cut back because of budgetary
problems. The number of clinicians [medical personnel] went from seventeen
to ten. The number of physicians went from three to essentially nobody.
Patient visits dropped to twenty-one thousand. There also was a similar
drop in the amount of field outreach staff. There was a lot of politics
— things that used to happen, like computer upgrades, didn't happen. It
was a worst-case scenario of city bureaucracy not functioning. They would
run out of drugs."
When there were 36,000 patient visits a
year in the STD clinics of Baltimore's inner city, in other words, the
disease was kept in equilibrium. At some point between 36,000 and 21,000
patient visits a year, according to Zenilman, the disease erupted. It
began spilling out of the inner city, up the streets and highways that
connect those neighborhoods to the rest of the city. Suddenly, people who
might have been infectious for a week before getting treated were now
going around infecting others for two or three or four weeks before they
got cured. The breakdown in treatment made syphilis a much bigger issue
than it had been before.
There is a third theory, which belongs to
John Potterat, one of the country's leading epidemiologists. His culprits
are the physical changes in those years affecting East and West Baltimore,
the heavily depressed neighborhoods on either side of Baltimore's
downtown, where the syphilis problem was centered. In the mid-1990s, he
points out, the city of Baltimore embarked on a highly publicized policy
of dynamiting the old 1960s-style public housing high-rises in East and
West Baltimore. Two of the most publicized demolitions — Lexington
Terrace in West Baltimore and Lafayette Courts in East Baltimore — were
huge projects, housing hundreds of families, that served as centers for
crime and infectious disease. At the same time, people began to move out
of the old row houses in East and West Baltimore, as those began to
deteriorate as well.
"It was absolutely striking,"
Potterat says, of the first time he toured East and West Baltimore.
"Fifty percent of the row houses were boarded up, and there was also
a process where they destroyed the projects. What happened was a kind of
hollowing out. This fueled the diaspora. For years syphilis had been
confined to a specific region of Baltimore, within highly confined
sociosexual networks. The housing dislocation process served to move these
people to other parts of Baltimore, and they took their syphilis and other
behaviors with them."
What is interesting about these three
explanations is that none of them is at all dramatic. The CDC thought that
crack was the problem. But it wasn't as if crack came to Baltimore for the
first time in 1995. It had been there for years. What they were saying is
that there was a subtle increase in the severity of the crack problem in
the mid-1990s, and that change was enough to set off the syphilis
epidemic. Zenilman, likewise, wasn't saying that the STD clinics in
Baltimore were shut down. They were simply scaled back, the number of
clinicians cut from seventeen to ten. Nor was Potterat saying that all
Baltimore was hollowed out. All it took, he said, was the demolition of a
handful of housing projects and the abandonment of homes in key downtown
neighborhoods to send syphilis over the top. It takes only the smallest of
changes to shatter an epidemic's equilibrium.
The second, and perhaps more interesting,
fact about these explanations is that all of them are describing a very
different way of tipping an epidemic. The CDC is talking about the overall
context for the disease — how the introduction and growth of an
addictive drug can so change the environment of a city that it can cause a
disease to tip. Zenilman is talking about the disease itself. When the
clinics were cut back, syphilis was given a second life. It had been an
acute infection. It was now a chronic infection. It had become a lingering
problem that stayed around for weeks. Potterat, for his part, was focused
on the people who were carrying syphilis. Syphilis, he was saying, was a
disease carried by a certain kind of person in Baltimore — a very poor,
probably drug-using, sexually active individual. If that kind of person
was suddenly transported from his or her old neighborhood to a new one —
to a new part of town, where syphilis had never been a problem before —
the disease would have an opportunity to tip.
There is more than one way to tip an
epidemic, in other words. Epidemics are a function of the people who
transmit infectious agents, the infectious agent itself, and the
environment in which the infectious agent is operating. And when an
epidemic tips, when it is jolted out of equilibrium, it tips because
something has happened, some change has occurred in one (or two or three)
of those areas. These three agents of change I call the Law of the Few,
the Stickiness Factor, and the Power of Context.
1.
When we say that a handful of East Village
kids started the Hush Puppies epidemic, or that the scattering of the
residents of a few housing projects was sufficient to start Baltimore's
syphilis epidemic, what we are really saying is that in a given process or
system some people matter more than others. This is not, on the face of
it, a particularly radical notion. Economists often talk about the 80/20
Principle, which is the idea that in any situation roughly 80 percent of
the "work" will be done by 20 percent of the participants. In
most societies, 20 percent of criminals commit 80 percent of crimes.
Twenty percent of motorists cause 80 percent of all accidents. Twenty
percent of beer drinkers drink 80 percent of all beer. When it comes to
epidemics, though, this disproportionality becomes even more extreme: a
tiny percentage of people do the majority of the work.
Potterat, for example, once did an analysis
of a gonorrhea epidemic in Colorado Springs, Colorado, looking at everyone
who came to a public health clinic for treatment of the disease over the
space of six months. He found that about half of all the cases came,
essentially, from four neighborhoods representing about 6 percent of the
geographic area of the city. Half of those in that 6 percent, in turn,
were socializing in the same six bars. Potterat then interviewed 768
people in that tiny subgroup and found that 600 of them either didn't give
gonorrhea to anyone else or gave it to only one other person. These people
he called nontransmitters. The ones causing the epidemic to grow — the
ones who were infecting two and three and four and five others with their
disease — were the remaining 168. In other words, in all of the city of
Colorado Springs — a town of well in excess of 100,000 people — the
epidemic of gonorrhea tipped because of the activities of 168 people
living in four small neighborhoods and basically frequenting the same six
bars.
Who were those 168 people? They aren't like
you or me. They are people who go out every night, people who have vastly
more sexual partners than the norm, people whose lives and behavior are
well outside of the ordinary. In the mid-1990s, for example, in the pool
halls and roller-skating rinks of East St. Louis, Missouri, there was a
man named Darnell "Boss Man" McGee. He was big — over six feet
— and charming, a talented skater, who wowed young girls with his
exploits on the rink. His specialty was thirteen- and fourteen-year-olds.
He bought them jewelry, took them for rides in his Cadillac, got them high
on crack, and had sex with them. Between 1995 and 1997, when he was shot
dead by an unknown assailant, he slept with at least 100 women and — it
turned out later — infected at least 30 of them with HIV.
In the same two-year period, fifteen
hundred miles away, near Buffalo, New York, another man — a kind of Boss
Man clone — worked the distressed downtown streets of Jamestown. His
name was Nushawn Williams, although he also went by the names
"Face," "Sly," and "Shyteek." Williams
juggled dozens of girls, maintaining three or four different apartments
around the city, and all the while supporting himself by smuggling drugs
up from the Bronx. (As one epidemiologist familiar with the case told me
flatly, "The man was a genius. If I could get away with what Williams
did, I'd never have to work a day again in my life.") Williams, like
Boss Man, was a charmer. He would buy his girlfriends roses, let them
braid his long hair, and host all-night marijuana and malt liquor-fueled
orgies at his apartments. "I slept with him three or four times in
one night," one of his partners remembered. "Me and him, we used
to party together all the time. . . . After Face had sex, his friends
would do it too. One would walk out, the other would walk in."
Williams is now in jail. He is known to have infected at least sixteen of
his former girlfriends with the AIDS virus. And most famously, in the book
And the Band Played On Randy Shilts discusses at length the
so-called Patient Zero of AIDS, the French-Canadian flight attendant
Gaetan Dugas, who claimed to have 2,500 sexual partners all over North
America, and who was linked to at least 40 of the earliest cases of AIDS
in California and New York. These are the kinds of people who make
epidemics of disease tip.
Social epidemics work in exactly the same
way. They are also driven by the efforts of a handful of exceptional
people. In this case, it's not sexual appetites that set them apart. It's
things like how sociable they are, or how energetic or knowledgeable or
influential among their peers. In the case of Hush Puppies, the great
mystery is how those shoes went from something worn by a few
fashion-forward downtown Manhattan hipsters to being sold in malls across
the country. What was the connection between the East Village and Middle
America? The Law of the Few says the answer is that one of these
exceptional people found out about the trend, and through social
connections and energy and enthusiasm and personality spread the word
about Hush Puppies just as people like Gaetan Dugas and Nushawn Williams
were able to spread HIV.
2.
In Baltimore, when the city's public
clinics suffered cutbacks, the nature of the syphilis affecting the city's
poor neighborhoods changed. It used to be an acute infection, something
that most people could get treated fairly quickly before they had a chance
to infect many others. But with the cutbacks, syphilis increasingly became
a chronic disease, and the disease's carriers had three or four or five
times longer to pass on their infection. Epidemics tip because of the
extraordinary efforts of a few select carriers. But they also sometimes
tip when something happens to transform the epidemic agent itself.
This is a well-known principle in virology.
The strains of flu that circulate at the beginning of each winter's flu
epidemic are quite different from the strains of flu that circulate at the
end. The most famous flu epidemic of all — the pandemic of 1918 — was
first spotted in the spring of that year and was, relatively speaking,
quite tame. But over the summer the virus underwent some strange
transformation and over the next six months ended up killing between 20
and 40 million people worldwide. Nothing had changed in the way in which
the virus was being spread. But the virus had suddenly become much more
deadly.
The Dutch AIDS researcher Jaap Goudsmit
argues that this same kind of dramatic transformation happened with HIV.
Goudsmit's work focuses on what is known as Pneumocystis carinii
pneumonia, or PCP. All of us carry the bacterium in our bodies, probably
since birth or immediately thereafter. In most of us it is harmless. Our
immune systems keep it in check easily. But if something, such as HIV,
wipes out our immune system, it becomes so uncontrollable that it can
cause a deadly form of pneumonia. PCP is so common among AIDS patients, in
fact, that it has come to be seen as an almost certain indication of the
presence of the virus. What Goudsmit did was go back in the medical
literature and look for cases of PCP, and what he found is quite chilling.
Just after World War II, beginning in the Baltic port city of Danzig and
spreading through central Europe, there was an epidemic of PCP that
claimed the lives of thousands of small children.
Goudsmit has analyzed one of the towns hit
hardest by the PCP epidemic, the mining town of Heerlen in the Dutch
province of Limburg. Heerlen had a training hospital for midwives called
the Kweekschool voor Vroedvrouwen, a single unit of which — the
so-called Swedish barrack — was used in the 1950s as a special ward for
underweight or premature infants. Between June 1955 and July 1958, 81
infants in the Swedish barrack came down with PCP and 24 died. Goudsmit
thinks that this was an early HIV epidemic, and that somehow the virus got
into the hospital, and was spread from child to child by the then,
apparently common, practice of using the same needles over and over again
for blood transfusions or injections of antibiotics. He writes:
| Most likely at least one adult —
probably a coal miner from Poland, Czechoslovakia, or Italy —
brought the virus to Limburg. This one adult could have died from AIDS
with little notice. . . . He could have transmitted the virus to his
wife and offspring. His infected wife (or girlfriend) could have given
birth in a Swedish barrack to a child who was HIV infected but
seemingly healthy. Unsterilized needles and syringes could have spread
the virus from child to child. |
The truly strange thing about this story,
of course, is that not all of the children died. Only a third did. The
others did what today would seem almost impossible. They defeated HIV,
purged it from their bodies, and went on to live healthy lives. In other
words, the strains of HIV that were circulating back in the 1950s were a
lot different from the strains of HIV that circulate today. They were
every bit as contagious. But they were weak enough that most people —
even small children — were able to fight them off and survive them. The
HIV epidemic tipped in the early 1980s, in short, not just because of the
enormous changes in sexual behavior in the gay communities that made it
possible for the virus to spread rapidly. It also tipped because HIV
itself changed. For one reason or another, the virus became a lot
deadlier. Once it infected you, you stayed infected. It stuck.
This idea of the importance of stickiness
in tipping has enormous implications for the way we regard social
epidemics as well. We tend to spend a lot of time thinking about how to
make messages more contagious — how to reach as many people as possible
with our products or ideas. But the hard part of communication is often
figuring out how to make sure a message doesn't go in one ear and out the
other. Stickiness means that a message makes an impact. You can't get it
out of your head. It sticks in your memory. When Winston filter-tip
cigarettes were introduced in the spring of 1954, for example, the company
came up with the slogan "Winston tastes good like a cigarette
should." At the time, the ungrammatical and somehow provocative use
of "like" instead of "as" created a minor sensation.
It was the kind of phrase that people talked about, like the famous
Wendy's tag line from 1984 "Where's the beef?" In his history of
the cigarette industry, Richard Kluger writes that the marketers at R. J.
Reynolds, which sells Winston, were "delighted with the
attention" and "made the offending slogan the lyric of a bouncy
little jingle on television and radio, and wryly defended their syntax as
a colloquialism rather than bad grammar." Within months of its
introduction, on the strength of that catchy phrase, Winston tipped,
racing past Parliament, Kent, and L&M into second place, behind
Viceroy, in the American cigarette market. Within a few years, it was the
bestselling brand in the country. To this day, if you say to most
Americans "Winston tastes good," they can finish the phrase,
"like a cigarette should." That's a classically sticky
advertising line, and stickiness is a critical component in tipping.
Unless you remember what I tell you, why would you ever change your
behavior or buy my product or go to see my movie?
The Stickiness Factor says that there are
specific ways of making a contagious message memorable; there are
relatively simple changes in the presentation and structuring of
information that can make a big difference in how much of an impact it
makes.
3.
Every time someone in Baltimore comes to a
public clinic for treatment of syphilis or gonorrhea, John Zenilman plugs
his or her address into his computer, so that the case shows up as a
little black star on a map of the city. It's rather like a medical version
of the maps police departments put up on their walls, with pins marking
where crimes have occurred. On Zenilman's map the neighborhoods of East
and West Baltimore, on either side of the downtown core, tend to be thick
with black stars. From those two spots, the cases radiate outward along
the two central roadways that happen to cut through both neighborhoods. In
the summer, when the incidence of sexually transmitted disease is highest,
the clusters of black stars on the roads leading out of East and West
Baltimore become thick with cases. The disease is on the move. But in the
winter months, the map changes. When the weather turns cold, and the
people of East and West Baltimore are much more likely to stay at home,
away from the bars and clubs and street corners where sexual transactions
are made, the stars in each neighborhood fade away.
The seasonal effect on the number of cases
is so strong that it is not hard to imagine that a long, hard winter in
Baltimore could be enough to slow or lessen substantially — at least for
the season — the growth of the syphilis epidemic.
Epidemics, Zenilman's map demonstrates, are
strongly influenced by their situation — by the circumstances and
conditions and particulars of the environments in which they operate. This
much is obvious. What is interesting, though, is how far this principle
can be extended. It isn't just prosaic factors like the weather that
influence behavior. Even the smallest and subtlest and most unexpected of
factors can affect the way we act. One of the most infamous incidents in
New York City history, for example, was the 1964 stabbing death of a young
Queens woman by the name of Kitty Genovese. Genovese was chased by her
assailant and attacked three times on the street, over the course of half
an hour, as thirty-eight of her neighbors watched from their windows.
During that time, however, none of the thirty-eight witnesses called the
police. The case provoked rounds of self-recrimination. It became symbolic
of the cold and dehumanizing effects of urban life. Abe Rosenthal, who
would later become editor of the New York Times, wrote in a book
about the case:
| Nobody can say why the thirty-eight did
not lift the phone while Miss Genovese was being attacked, since they
cannot say themselves. It can be assumed, however, that their apathy
was indeed one of the big-city variety. It is almost a matter of
psychological survival, if one is surrounded and pressed by millions
of people, to prevent them from constantly impinging on you, and the
only way to do this is to ignore them as often as possible.
Indifference to one's neighbor and his troubles is a conditioned
reflex in life in New York as it is in other big cities. |
This is the kind of environmental
explanation that makes intuitive sense to us. The anonymity and alienation
of big-city life makes people hard and unfeeling. The truth about
Genovese, however, turns out to be a little more complicated — and more
interesting. Two New York City psychologists — Bibb Latane of Columbia
University and John Darley of New York University — subsequently
conducted a series of studies to try to understand what they dubbed the
"bystander problem." They staged emergencies of one kind or
another in different situations in order to see who would come and help.
What they found, surprisingly, was that the one factor above all else that
predicted helping behavior was how many witnesses there were to the event.
In one experiment, for example, Latane and
Darley had a student alone in a room stage an epileptic fit. When there
was just one person next door, listening, that person rushed to the
student's aid 85 percent of the time. But when subjects thought that there
were four others also overhearing the seizure, they came to the student's
aid only 31 percent of the time. In another experiment, people who saw
smoke seeping out from under a doorway would report it 75 percent of the
time when they were on their own, but the incident would be reported only
38 percent of the time when they were in a group. When people are in a
group, in other words, responsibility for acting is diffused. They assume
that someone else will make the call, or they assume that because no one
else is acting, the apparent problem — the seizure-like sounds from the
other room, the smoke from the door — isn't really a problem. In the
case of Kitty Genovese, then, social psychologists like Latane and Darley
argue, the lesson is not that no one called despite the fact that
thirty-eight people heard her scream; it's that no one called because
thirty-eight people heard her scream. Ironically, had she been attacked on
a lonely street with just one witness, she might have lived.
The key to getting people to change their
behavior, in other words, to care about their neighbor in distress,
sometimes lies with the smallest details of their immediate situation. The
Power of Context says that human beings are a lot more sensitive to their
environment than they may seem.
4.
The three rules of the Tipping Point —
the Law of the Few, the Stickiness Factor, the Power of Context — offer
a way of making sense of epidemics. They provide us with direction for how
to go about reaching a Tipping Point. The balance of this book will take
these ideas and apply them to other puzzling situations and epidemics from
the world around us. How do these three rules help us understand teenage
smoking, for example, or the phenomenon of word of mouth, or crime, or the
rise of a bestseller? The answers may surprise you.
© 2000 by Malcolm Gladwell
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