It’s All About the Drive in Outliers: The Story of Success by Malcolm Gladwell

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In the second chapter of his book “Outliers: The Story of Success,” Malcolm Gladwell introduces what he believes to be a key ingredient in the recipe for success: practice. The number of hours he says one must practice to obtain expert-level proficiency in a particular skill is ten thousand hours. He goes on to list several examples of successful individuals and makes the correlation between the amount of hours they practiced their skill and when they achieved expert-level proficiency (almost always around ten thousand hours of practice). While the magic number appears to be the main focus of the chapter when it comes to success, Gladwell seems to put more emphasis on the advantage and opportunities each individual experienced. However, I believe the determining factor that distinguished their successful careers was their drive, passion and dedication to put in the hours necessary to turn those unique opportunities into success.
Gladwell repeats the ten thousand hour number several times throughout the chapter and he states that researchers believe “the magic number for true expertise” is ten thousand hours (40). I agree that it takes a substantial amount of practice to go beyond simple proficiency to become an expert in many areas. However, I’m not completely sold on the ten thousand hour number. Many people put in well over forty hours of work each week, fifty weeks a year, totaling over 10,000 hours in a five-year period. How many would consider themselves “experts” after only five years of practice? Repetition, especially flawed repetition, does not lead towards perfection. Practice needs to be structured and focused so you can develop your strengths while improving your weaknesses. While 10,000 hours may not make one an exper...

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...same level of access? Why was Gates ultimately more experienced and successful than any of them? Gates said it was his “obsession” (52). He had a passion for computers and programming that drove him to sneak out at night and put in those long hours necessary to become an expert.
I have no doubt that the amount of practice each individual put into their craft played a large part in their career paths and overall success. However, I have to disagree that “opportunity” was the distinguishing factor in their success over others. More important than simply having an opportunity is seeing that opportunity where others don’t and having the drive and passion to work hard and put in the necessary hours to turn that opportunity into a success.

Works Cited

Gladwell, Malcolm. “The 10,000-Hour Rule.” Outliers: The Story of Success. New York: Little, Brown, 2008. 35-55. Print.

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