Blink: The Power of Thinking Without Thinking

  Author:    Malcolm Gladwell
  ISBN:    0316010669
  Sales Rank:    127
  Published:    2007-04-01
  Publisher:    Back Bay Books
  # Pages:    320
  Binding:    Paperback
  Avg. Rating:    4.0 based on 970 reviews
  Used Offers:    112 from $4.50
  Amazon Price:    $10.87
  (Data above last updated:  2008-11-29 02:55:48 EST)
  
  
Sort customer reviews by:
  
Show All Reviews on Page      Hide All Reviews on Page
   
  
Blink: The Power of Thinking Without Thinking
  
Blink is about the first two seconds of looking--the decisive glance that knows in an instant. Gladwell, the best-selling author of The Tipping Point, campaigns for snap judgments and mind reading with a gift for translating research into splendid storytelling. Building his case with scenes from a marriage, heart attack triage, speed dating, choking on the golf course, selling cars, and military maneuvers, he persuades readers to think small and focus on the meaning of "thin slices" of behavior. The key is to rely on our "adaptive unconscious"--a 24/7 mental valet--that provides us with instant and sophisticated information to warn of danger, read a stranger, or react to a new idea. Gladwell includes caveats about leaping to conclusions: marketers can manipulate our first impressions, high arousal moments make us "mind blind," focusing on the wrong cue leaves us vulnerable to "the Warren Harding Effect" (i.e., voting for a handsome but hapless president). In a provocative chapter that exposes the "dark side of blink," he illuminates the failure of rapid cognition in the tragic stakeout and murder of Amadou Diallo in the Bronx. He underlines studies about autism, facial reading and cardio uptick to urge training that enhances high-stakes decision-making.In this brilliant, cage-rattling book, one can only wish for a thicker slice of Gladwell's ideas about what Blink Camp might look like.--Barbara Mackoff
Blink is about the first two seconds of looking--the decisive glance that knows in an instant. Gladwell, the best-selling author of The Tipping Point, campaigns for snap judgments and mind reading with a gift for translating research into splendid storytelling. Building his case with scenes from a marriage, heart attack triage, speed dating, choking on the golf course, selling cars, and military maneuvers, he persuades readers to think small and focus on the meaning of "thin slices" of behavior. The key is to rely on our "adaptive unconscious"--a 24/7 mental valet--that provides us with instant and sophisticated information to warn of danger, read a stranger, or react to a new idea.

Gladwell includes caveats about leaping to conclusions: marketers can manipulate our first impressions, high arousal moments make us "mind blind," focusing on the wrong cue leaves us vulnerable to "the Warren Harding Effect" (i.e., voting for a handsome but hapless president). In a provocative chapter that exposes the "dark side of blink," he illuminates the failure of rapid cognition in the tragic stakeout and murder of Amadou Diallo in the Bronx. He underlines studies about autism, facial reading and cardio uptick to urge training that enhances high-stakes decision-making. In this brilliant, cage-rattling book, one can only wish for a thicker slice of Gladwell's ideas about what Blink Camp might look like. --Barbara Mackoff

                  Reader Reviews 1 - 50 of 330            Next
  
  
Review
Date
Review
Rating(5 High)
Review
Helpful
to:
Customer Review Reviewer
Info
Permanent
Link
Reader Reviews Below Sorted by Newest First
11-26-08 3 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  No facts, all speculation
Reviewer Permalink
If you want to try something a bit more practical, try this: Tao Cycle Therapy: Natural Happiness via Self Directed Cure for Chronic Anxiety & Depression [Updated 2008 3nd Edition]
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-11-30 04:09:25 EST)
11-23-08 5 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  Another fascinating subject!
Reviewer Permalink
Having read The Tipping Point for our book club, I was looking forward to reading this book with the same group, and was not disappointed. Fascinating insights into a fairly obscure topic. Makes one really think about ones own prejudices and intuitions.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-11-27 03:33:18 EST)
11-22-08 3 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  Entertaining but often confusing if you think too hard about it
Reviewer Permalink
Although I found "blink" engrossing, Gladwell's talent as a writer often lets him get away with murder. The distinctions he makes sometimes seem arbitrary, particularly if one takes just a little more than 2 seconds to mull things over. Some of his extrapolations not only seem unjustified but mislead. For example, in his discussion of malpractice, Gladwell urges his patients to find their doctors "wanting" if they appear not to be listening or talking down. But the research on which Gladwell bases his malpractice discussion simply found a correlation between this sort of behavior and a physician's likelihood of being sued. There was no discussion of whether the physicians who were sued more frequently when this sort of behavior was present also had delivered less appropriate care with any greater frequency. While many of us would prefer a doctor who takes the time to listen, we also want a competent doctor. Would it necessarily be wise to pass up a doctor with an excellent clinical reputation simply because he/she was a cold fish? In a discussion about hospital emergency departments, Gladwell asserts that "what screws up doctors when they are trying to predict heart attacks is that they take too much information into account." He bases this conclusion on research performed in the 1970s that produced an algorithm for determining heart attacks that considered far less data than traditional methods of diagnosis and was far more accurate and safe. What seems obvious, however, is that the algorithm worked better not because it required less information but rather because it had identified the right information to use. And the algorithm had been developed after only "feeding hundreds of cases into a computer", so there also appears to have been nothing intuitive about which data would prove to be the best data to use in assessing the likelihood of heart attack. Gladwell ends his Afterword with the suggestion that, given the demonstrated bias against black defendants in criminal trials, "the accused shouldn't be in the courtroom" and "should answer all questions by e-mail or through the use of an intermediary." In this manner, the jury's and judge's bias would be mitigated. Constitutional issues aside, if juries and judges are on average (at least unconsciously) biased against black defendants, why shouldn't those same biases affect jury and judge perceptions of black witnesses? Do we also need to remove all witnesses from the courtroom? But after having removed all witnesses and defendants from the courtroom, how much potentially valuable information is lost by the inability to view witness and defendant (if the defendant chooses to take the stand) facial and body language of the sort that Gladwell earlier in the book asserts is so meaningful? Has one type of injustice been "solved" in exchange for creating the possibility of many more? My gut tells me that figuring out how to remedy courtroom racial bias is going to require more thinking than blinking.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-11-27 03:33:18 EST)
11-19-08 5 1\1
(Hide Review...)  Great storytelling
Reviewer Permalink
I really love a good story, and the stories in this book were fascinating, especially since you weren't sure where each one was going. So much food for thought-- you may just read it in a few days, but spend weeks thinking about it (or telling your husband about it over and over...). Great!
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-11-23 02:58:10 EST)
11-10-08 3 2\2
(Hide Review...)  pretty much goes nowhere
Reviewer Permalink
I found this a tremendously interesting read: during two days or so it took me to read it, I really couldn't put it down. (A teacher, I put my students to work doing a bunch of soul-crushing busy work so I could finish reading it during classtime.)

It's full of great anecdotes, and Gladwell has a lucid and engaging style.

The problem is this: as far as what Gladwell's actually saying, his observations don't sum to much.

The basic thesis -- as I'm sure you know -- is that people in certain walks of life are frequently found to exhibit eerily reliable snap judgments, whereby they can arrive at the core of (what seem to us) monstrously complex problems in only a second or two.

Fair enough. The phenomenon certainly exists. Gladwell documents it well and you find yourself convinced that he's not making this up.

Alas. The book attempts to go further than that, and that's where it falls flat.

Gladwell never successfully articulates exactly how it is that his various "thin-slicers" actually work their magic. Further, he fails to give proper weight to the counter-evidence: loads of cases where snap judgments fail. Offhand, I would imagine that judging situations based on one's initial impression is, on average, a dumb way to go most of the time (even perilous in some contexts).

But so enthusiastic is Gladwell about the laundry-list of exceptions he has collected that it's almost to the point where he's implying that preternatural snap judgments are USUALLY reliable, rather than OCCASIONALLY reliable. Which is quite the daring claim.

Finally, Gladwell fails to provide any guidance on the question of how one could systematically learn to hone such a skill, assuming that it can even exist in one's discipline (I remain to be convinced that snap judgments have a role to play in all walks of life).

The end result of these shortcomings is that the only thing "Blink" does effectively is point out that the phenomenon exists. By itself this is not terribly useful.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-11-23 02:58:10 EST)
11-10-08 2 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  BLink and you'll fall asleep..
Reviewer Permalink
Blink! what seemed like a fascinating subject pulled me in and then after 100 pages I put it down. Just like that, in a flash of a moment or a blink, I decided I can't finish this book. Might have made a fascinating magazine article in New Yorker magazine but like that magazine this book just started boring me. Blink.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-11-23 02:58:10 EST)
11-08-08 1 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  Blink and maybe you'll miss this one
Reviewer Permalink
The basic idea is interesting and held my attention for a while, but eventually lost my interest.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-11-11 04:18:34 EST)
10-28-08 5 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  blink...and then it's gone
Reviewer Permalink
There's not much substance to this book. Rather than being a resource of information, it is merely a book of examples. There is no broad takeaway you can gather from it after reading except to say perhaps that many of our decisions are based on split-second thoughts. But did you really need to read this book to find that out?
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-11-08 02:54:16 EST)
10-23-08 1 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  Waste of time
Reviewer Permalink
This book was, by far, the most redundant thing I have ever read. It would have made for an interesting article in a newspaper or magazine; however, the book itself is way too long and repetitious for its topic. I am very disappointed that I spent money on this item. Too bad my "thin slicing" is apparently terrible and could not help me on this purchase.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-10-28 03:04:35 EST)
10-22-08 2 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  Interesting compilation, but not as cohesive as The Tipping Point
Reviewer Permalink
Gladwell writes interestingly and clearly about some interesting research. But it doesn't stick together for me; seems more a compilation of essays than a cohesive book. Nor do I believe the main simplistic conclusion people tend to draw from it is justified or helpful.

More specifically, Blink doesn't at all justify the general simplification so many seem to be taking that it's ALWAYS (or even nearly always) best to go with immediate intuition/gut feel rather than more deliberate decision-making. Rather, one of the key aspects of judgement and decision-making is knowing when to go with a quick intuitive assessment and when a systematic approach is needed. Blink doesn't help me much with that at all; rather it seems to obscure the issue in my view.

Hence I see the first chapters of 'Nudge' as a better popular introduction to decision-making. The first author of Nudge (Thaler) has the depth of experience in decision-making research that Gladwell lacks.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-10-28 03:04:35 EST)
10-22-08 2 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  Ultimately a disappointment
Reviewer Permalink
Let me being this by saying that reading Malcolm Gladwell's books are always a pleasure; he constructs his works like a documentary film, and that makes the complex topics he writes about both engrossing and more approachable. If a reader were to read only the first half of this book, they may have a more positive impression of this book then it is worthy of.

However, this book is an utter disappointment because it never reaches a conclusion. I feel like Mr. Gladwell started this book in support of the unconscious mind as a powerful, accurate decision making force; and as he researched further, grew less sure of this position, until near the end of the book he warns us against relying on the unconscious At the very end, it's apparent that the author doesn't really know where he stands on this topic, and in the afterward, the reader is ping-ponged back and forth as Mr. Gladwell argues with himself.

His final conclusion that he leaves us with--that juries should not be allowed to view a defendant in person--flies in the face of other research that he presents earlier in the book--that the unconscious mind is able to pick up on "micro-expressions" that reveal obscured emotions and motivations.

Mr. Gladwell is clearly unable to make a decision on this topic, and that only leaves his readers ultimately confused.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-10-28 03:04:35 EST)
10-20-08 4 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  Entertaining, Educating, Provocative
Reviewer Permalink
Malcolm Gladwell is an entertaining writer. His book The Tipping Point almost made my Top Ten list last year, not only for the thoroughly enjoyable read (which it was), but also for the intriguing analysis into human behavior and consumerism that Gladwell offers.

Blink carries on The Tipping Point's tradition of great illustrations and fascinating data. This is a book about "the power of thinking without thinking." In summary, Gladwell shows us how our snap judgments are often more accurate than our deliberate decisions that we take months to make. Gladwell peppers the book with examples that prove his thesis, providing church leaders with plenty of stories that beg to be used as sermon illustrations.

Gladwell also writes about the "dark side of blink," when our snap judgments are wrong. He writes of police mistakes, voter shallowness, and the fact that Coke still outsells Pepsi, even when Pepsi wins hands-down in a taste contest.

This book is entertaining, educating, and provocative, and it challenges some of our presuppositions about how the mind works.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-10-22 03:47:48 EST)
10-18-08 3 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  Interesting, but inconclusive
Reviewer Permalink
Malcolm blends storytelling and journalism into very interesting reading. Somehow the reading is not entirely satisfying, because there's really no point. Most readers take from the book that we can make decisions within a couple seconds and that can be more accurate than taking weeks or months to study the situation. Often it boils down to experience. At the same time, the book talks about how wrong our initial impressions can be, because of bias, stereotypes, and pressure.

So the lesson is that your initial impressions made within the first second or two can be dead on right...except when you're dead on wrong. Fun stories, though.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-10-22 01:50:07 EST)
10-14-08 5 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  The art of split-second thinking
Reviewer Permalink
There are almost one thousand reviews for this book, most are positive, do I need to submit one? Yes.

The author discusses split-second thinking, or "in the blink of an eye" speed of thought. He postulates that those rapid decisions are usually better. He backs it up with many examples of decisions made with more time, more information, and more discussion that turned out wrong, when the initial decision was actually the correct one. How does this happen?

The subconscious mind processes many inputs and helps to steer our decisions. It is usually right and we need to trust it more often. I trade financial products and I have found that too much information does not give me a clearer picture of what is going to happen, especially in the short to very short term future. I don't know how many times each week while looking at the market, I get this flash of go long, or go short. I have started tracking these thoughts and they are correct almost 90% of the time. How is that possible? I don't know, but I assume my subconscious mind picks up small clues that my conscious mind misses, or needs more information to form an opinion.

The whole process is very exciting and while I can't explain the details, I can verify the results. Another book that delves deeper into the thought process and the subconscious decision-making process is Hare Brain, Tortoise Mind: How Intelligence Increases When You Think Less an excellent book, which I read a couple of years ago and I think I am ready to pull it off the shelf and give it a second read.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-10-22 01:50:07 EST)
10-08-08 4 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  Great book even if I don't agree with it...
Reviewer Permalink
The book is based on an interesting premise and the writing style is very easy to read, it really sucks you in. I personally REALLY like Malcolm Gladwell's books/lectures/ideas -- he's defeinitely one of my favorites.

Note that after reading this book I'm not convinced that I completely agree with the fundamental arguement it's trying to make. I also didn't like it as much as Gladwell's previous book, Tipping Point. But, I don't want to sound overly critical. What I consider high quality writing isn't based upon whether or not I agree with the arguement the author is trying to make. The ideas are unique and creative and that alone is basis enough for me to give this book four stars. One last note is that you might want to look at the rebuttal to this book titled Think! (I have not read it but if you find Blink interesting you would probably also like Think!).
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-10-22 01:50:07 EST)
10-05-08 5 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  Intuition is No Simple Subject Matter to "Thin-Slice" - Gladwell does it Well!
Reviewer Permalink
Gladwell (intuition/"thin-slicing"), Coleman (emotional intelligence/"limbic high-jacking"), De Bono (lateral thinking/"water logic")... Brains within brains... Thinking without thinking... Thinking about thinking... The states of non-duality and no-mind of not thinking at all and just being...

The lotus of consciousness is still flowering, it seems... The pollen of popularization is still spreading across the printing presses... And we, the readers, violently sneeze out the allergies of oblivion as we thumb through the pages of these operating manuals for our consciousness...

Excuse the late-night reviewing poetics. Seriously: be glad Gladwell writes so well - intuiton is no simple subject matter to "thin-slice."


Pavel Somov, Ph.D., Author of "Eating the Moment: 141 Mindful Practices to Overcome Overeating One Meal at a Time" (New Harbinger, Nov. 2008)
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-10-08 02:57:19 EST)
10-02-08 5 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  Blink - A Must Read
Reviewer Permalink
"Blink" almost instantly made it to my shelf of favorite books of all time. I won't go into a detailed description of Gladwell's theory of thin-slicing, as other reviewers have already done this in all the detail you need to know before you decide to purchase this book (which I highly recommend you do) Instead, I'll tell you what I took away from "Blink", and why I think it's such an important read.

"Blink" is more than just a series of entertaining anecdotes that support his theory. It is a book of lessons that provide insight into our minds, and the minds of those around us. Armed with this knowledge, we are better prepared to not only understand our own decision-making process, but to see, for a blink of an eye, what others are seeing when they make decisions about us. Many of the experiments and studies he describes contain information that can be directly applied to one's life.

A good example of this is the study done in Germany that turns our idea of `feeling happy' on its head. While everyone knows that when you're happy, you smile, a team of German scientists found that it works in reverse as well. The simple act of smiling improves your mood. One could just take this interesting factoid and store it in the lumber room of your mind along with all the other trivia. I chose to make it relevant. I can't tell you how many times it's happened since reading this book that I felt angry, frustrated, impatient, or irritated in some way, and then turned my mood around just by forcing myself to smile for a little bit.

Another sub-chapter of the book ("Arguing with a Dog") describes what Gladwell calls "temporary autism", a kind of mind-blindness that occurs when one is excited or stressed to the point that the heart rate rises above 145. I found this chapter very helpful in understanding the physiological process, as my work often requires me to deal with very stressed out people. (It helped with some easily excitable friends too!)

The sub-chapter titled `The Storytelling Problem", which detailed the vast difference between what people say they want in a mate and what they are in fact attracted to, made me feel a lot better after reading it. After years of hearing women describe their "perfect man" to me, and then seeing them fall for a perfect jerk instead, I've gotten more than a little frustrated. But now I know there is a psychological reason for this insanity. I wish I could make every single woman in the country read this chapter (or at least the single women in my city!) On a similar note, I wish I could make everyone read the chapter called "The Warren G. Harding Error", which details the power of looks and our subconscious predilection for "tall, dark, and handsome" men. This chapter is especially relevant in an election year, when we are looking at our two candidates and judging them. Do we really know upon what basis we are judging? Are TRULY picking the best man for the job, or are we voting on who has made the more "presidential" first impression? As much as most people won't admit that race plays any part in their vote, mightn't it anyway, even among those people who truly DO deplore racism? Do we like a candidate because of what he or she truly stands for, or are we voting for them because they smile more often, or joke more often, or were wearing our favorite color the first time we saw them? One section of the book even describes how people can be "primed", subtly influenced to think and behave differently, at least in the short term. Are we, as voters, being "primed" by the various media? I think these are all very valid and relevant questions we need to ask ourselves.

This is what I took away from "Blink"- a deeper understanding of the decision-making process, and what factors assist or subvert it. "Paul Van Riper's Big Victory" is a portrait of a decision-making model that works. "Pepsi's Challenge" describes a situation where thin-slicing doesn't work out. "The Chair of Death" describes an interesting hiccup in the thin-slicing process, where peoples' initial reaction can be negative, not because something is genuinely bad, but simply because it is unfamiliar. And "Blink in Black and White", which not only relates the problem of automatic subconscious racial stereotyping (even of ones OWN race) but supplies a test you can do yourself, was nothing less than chilling.

OK, Gladwell is a writer, not a scientist. If you're looking for an airtight theory complete with control group testing and a detailed analysis of every possible permutation of the concept, go read a scientific journal. And, as another reviewer pointed out, he does tend to end his books with a thud rather than a conclusion. Nonetheless, I think this should be required reading in every American high school. The idea is that compelling, and the issues involved are that important.

(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-10-06 05:18:19 EST)
09-28-08 2 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  Not a must read book
Reviewer Permalink
Let me start by saying that each chapter in the book is very interesting, easy to read and engaging. A real page turner from this point of view.

Now, having said that, as a whole I couldn't see what was the author getting at through the book. The book starts with the premise that some people can make a snap decision about something and be right, which is interesting. But then, the book goes into chapter after chapter of examples on exemptions to this. Which at the end feels like the original premise is completely false. The only conclusion I could get is that some expert in something might be able to make a quick decision and be right, which is mostly chance alone.

So in essence I found this book to be mostly unimportant.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-10-03 04:23:57 EST)
09-25-08 5 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  Fascinating book
Reviewer Permalink
In Blink, Malcolm Gladwell (a journalist who also wrote The Tipping Point) examines the process of snap decision making. He suggests that we are wrong in thinking that we make decisions rationally by absorbing extensive information and experience. In the end we make decisions unconsciously and essentially instantly. This works great for most decisions because we learn to "thin-slice"-that is, to ignore extraneous input and concentrate on one or two cues. Sometimes, we don't even consciously know what these cues are, as in Gladwell's anecdote about a tennis coach who can predict when a player is going to make a rare sort of error but doesn't know how he knows. The book also explores how this process can go horribly wrong, as in the Amadou Diallo shooting. Gladwell gets the science facts right and has the journalistic skills to make them utterly engrossing.

I'm a rabid fan of these "how it all works" type of psychology books. Two others I fell in love with recently are The Emotional Intelligence Quick Book and The Impulse Factor: Why Some of Us Play It Safe and Others Risk It All
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-09-29 02:59:37 EST)
09-24-08 5 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  Another Great Book for Gladwell
Reviewer Permalink
An excellent book, just as good as Gladwell's previous landmark, "The Tipping Point," "Blink" is fascinating in the confirmation that "thin slice" first impressions are more than intuitive, they are the results of subconscious factual significant experience and realities, and in many cases subconscious bias. Interesting too, is the evidence that we can think "too much" and counter our "intuitive" knowledge judgments with obfuscating factual study - "introspection destroyed people's ability to solve insight problems" and, as is quoted, "what happens is that we come up with a plausible-sounding reason for why we might like or dislike something, and then we adjust our true preference to be in line with that plausible-sounding reason." I especially like the section on focus groups, how results on "first impressions" can be very wrong, "We like market research because it provides certainty...but the truth is that for the most important decisions, there can be no certainty" says Gladwell. I particularly like the example of how the Aeron chair by Herman Miller failed every focus group rating it took on looks, and "likely to purchase" reviews, yet became the best selling chair in the company's history (and then focus groups reversed their scores), ditto audience reaction to the best selling situation comedies of their time, "All in the Family" and "The Mary Tyler Moore Show." Applying the analysis to a polarizing product today in the automotive industry, as someone who is looking at the launch of the new reaction creating Ford Flex vehicle (September 23, 2008), I'm wondering whether or not what Gladwell said about the initial "looks" rating for the Aeron chair is true for the new Ford Crossover in the looks department - that is, as its very different looking, "Maybe the word `ugly' was just a proxy for `different." And when people get familiar with the `difference' time will change perception (as it did with the Ford Taurus over two decades ago). It will be interesting to see how this "real world" example of Gladwell's observations rolls out.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-09-29 02:59:37 EST)
09-18-08 4 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  quite thought provoking
Reviewer Permalink
Definitely on my recommended book list. A must read for women in business.

Susan Bock
The Success Coach for Women in Business
www.SusanBockSolutions.com
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-09-18 15:21:22 EST)
09-18-08 4 0\1
(Hide Review...)  quite thought provoking
Reviewer Permalink
Definitely on my recommended book list. A must read for women in business.

Susan Bock
The Success Coach for Women in Business
www.SusanBockSolutions.com
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-09-25 01:17:45 EST)
09-15-08 5 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  Let your unconscious pre-judge for you...
Reviewer Permalink
This is probably one of the best books I have read. This book is an excellent compilation of captivating studies in very different fields, carefully selected by the author to make his point. How by artificially altering your facial expressions your mood can change (for example if you put up a sad face you get grieved), how a psychologist can tell if a marriage is going to last by studying how the couple reacts in a simulated argument, etc.

We all take decisions "in the blink of an eye", even if it is only a decision of trusting a person or not. This is how our brain works, if you like it or not. Maybe we should not call them decisions, since the word decision implies some sort of reasoning and a process of weighing pros and cons, I would also not call this process thinking without thinking. Maybe we should call them judgements or pre-judgements (prejudices).

A lot of information is stored, retrieved, compared and judged in seconds in our unconscious, a process of which we are completely unaware of. So it makes perfect sense that the more experienced and educated our unconscious is, the better these pre-judgements will be. I do not believe that a lay person would detect a false work of art by pure instinct (by a feeling of "something is wrong with this work of art"), like experts did in one of the stories. Their unconscious perceived some "anomalies" quickly, by comparison with the huge amounts of previously recorded information of this period's artistic style. The experts could not explain why they felt that way, since consciously they had not noticed the anomalies yet. On the other hand, I think that a person with deep knowledge of people might have unconsciously detected that the art dealer selling the work of art was uneasy in some way, so he might have got a "hunch" that something was wrong.

This book tells you that you should trust your gut-feelings, but that you should "nurture" them with observation and expertise to make them more precise. Since these pre-judgements are influenced by our cultural environment and far quicker than ourselves and our conscious rational minds, they are also the basis of unfair prejudices that can make you act upon them and that are difficult to override (the author even claims that in situations in which time is of the essence, they are impossible to overcome, since we react upon them before thinking). Test your "racism" and "sexism" in a brief exercise in a chapter of the book, you will be surprised...

The best is probably to let our unconscious pre-judge and then we can still decide by a thinking process. Nature gave us both abilities, let's use them both.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-09-18 15:21:22 EST)
09-10-08 5 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  Amazing
Reviewer Permalink
If you have a short attention span, these short stories, loosely tied together by a few ideas is great for you. This is my favorite book of all-time. I seriously recommend this to anyone who is fascinated by the weirdness of the human mind.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-09-15 03:26:39 EST)
09-05-08 5 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  Great Book for the thinking person
Reviewer Permalink
This book is required reading for all incoming freshman at the top ranked engineering school in the U.S. The book is very readable, insightful, and useful.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-09-10 01:13:28 EST)
09-05-08 5 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  The decisions you make in the blink of an eye
Reviewer Permalink
A fascinating study of how the mind works and the effects our gut reactions can have on our decisions, "Blink" hammered Gladwell's point into me in an engaging and entertaining read. The writing is easy but intelligent, and I loved the specific examples and stories, particularly one about the war games. Not only do they help support Gladwell's notion but they're enough to create enjoyable stories by themselves.

The main idea I took away? First impressions aren't everything, but they're a lot more than you realize.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-09-10 01:13:28 EST)
09-01-08 5 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  Expanded Thinking
Reviewer Permalink
A very interesting and clever book. We know more than we might think when it comes to making judgments. Malcolm Gladwell provides excellent examples of how we can improve our decision making by paying more attention to our intuitive side. He's not suggesting that information gathering and research be ignored, only that we also consider the benefits to be derived from learning and making decsions in a different way. His examples are fascinating and the book's long term high ranking is well deserved. It's a hard book to put down.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-09-05 01:14:17 EST)
08-23-08 5 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  An Excellent Management Guide!
Reviewer Permalink
As a person that has worked in manufacturing organizations all of my life, I often wondered how the grizzled veteran managers could always tell what was going to happen next. They didn't seem to be any smarter than the average Joe but somehow, they could predict the future. That is, the future of action or behavior A would result in item B materializing, just as sure as the sun rises in the morning.

This book is a landmark because it explains these mysteries to me. Not only is the book a highly interesting read, but it is an invaluable guide for those in managerial positions. Not only do I practice what it preaches but I also teach the concept to others.

I high recommend this book and have included it in my Amazon lists and guides. If you are in management, you need this book in your collection! Michael L. Gooch, SPHR Author of
Wingtips with Spurs
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-09-02 00:20:35 EST)
08-19-08 4 1\1
(Hide Review...)  A must read...
Reviewer Permalink
I think this is a must read, especially for those that enjoy psychology and understanding human behavior, human interaction and the reason we do many of the things the way we do. I think it is also a great self improvement tool
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-08-23 01:15:51 EST)
08-15-08 5 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  Very good book
Reviewer Permalink
This is a very good book. (Sorry to repeat myself...) I really appreciate the other side of the coin. Thinking has been drilled into my head and I tend to totally ignore anything else. If it isn't a fact that I can define, it can't be not real or true. But there is some value in intuition. Some things are under the radar of our thought, (and should be, or we'd be overwhelmed), but they can be important. Intuition is our way of communicating that to ourselves.

This book has gotten some criticism - of course people should think. But there has not been much written on the power of intuition. When a person is knowledgeable about a subject, and they feel like something is wrong, they should trust, or at least acknowledge and respect that feeling. You can't just trust your intuition (make a guess) and go with it if you don't know anything about the thing you are "guessing" about. But if you do know about something, say you are an expert on US Currency (or someone who handles money alot), and you see a $20 bill that something seems wrong, should you act on that instinct, or do you say - "I can't see anything specifically wrong with it, so it must be ok."? If you were a foreigner, and came to the US, and looked at a $20 bill and said - something seems wrong about this, of course you can't go with that feeling, because you don't know anything about a $20 bill.

Anyways, read the book. It's worth it.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-08-20 01:15:46 EST)
08-14-08 5 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  Great book
Reviewer Permalink
This book is a great buy and the seller is very good. Lightning fast shipping.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-08-20 01:15:46 EST)
08-08-08 3 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  Almost...
Reviewer Permalink
First, let me say that this is a good book. It's well worth your time to read. I don't think that it's as good as the Tipping Point though. This one seems to go a little longer than what is necessary maybe. It seems to be like Mr. Gladwell is trying to stretch it out a bit. The good thing about all of it though, is that it is a very quick read, and you won't have a lot of time invested into it. So definitely pick this one up, you won't regret it!
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-08-15 01:17:05 EST)
08-03-08 5 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  Two seconds make all the difference
Reviewer Permalink
Gladwell offers an intriguing look at how the subconscious or intuition of a person works in different situations, as well as how it can be trained and the importance of sometimes taking a step back before acting on a situation. This is a relatively quick read with some intriguing ideas offered in it. If you like this book, you may find it useful to track down some of the writings by people he references as they go into more depth than Gladwell does.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-08-09 03:00:30 EST)
08-01-08 5 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  I picked this book up on a whim - good decision
Reviewer Permalink

Blink by Malcolm Gladwell is subtitled The Power of Thinking Without Thinking. Because that pretty much summarizes my life, I decided to read it even though it's an "intellectual" book and I usually steer away from too much heavy reading. I'm glad I made an exception.

Blink had my attention from the beginning. Gladwell has assembled interesting vignettes from normal worldly life and used them to illustrate his point about the value and dangers of making snap judgments. He doesn't advise us to discard all cognitive reasoning or experience as background for coming to a decision, but he points to many past decisions that could have been better if reams of information, scientific facts, and expert opinions had been ignored. Thin slices of experience, as opposed to lengthy studies or long periods of familiarization, often produce more satisfying and productive decisions.

Gladwell presents many examples of better decisions through snap judgments. A quick analysis of couples by observers produced a higher accuracy rating in the chances of their marriages making it as opposed to lengthy studies of their compatibility, small talk patterns, and body language. A singer's music CD inadvertently fell into the hands of the co-president of a large record company who loved it and passed it around. The singer's success was almost immediate because he was thin-sliced by top executives who knew and liked good music and knew how to promote it. But then market research firms published opinions by mainstream listeners from around the country who found him lacking and unlikely to find a core audience or to gain significant radio air-play. People who had never seen him, and only listened to a couple of his songs, completely stalled his career.

Large symphony orchestras, traditionally mostly male, have improved their performance by hiring females who audition from behind screens, masking their sex. Innovative military commanders who rely on experience and seat-of-the-pants decisions have regularly trounced better prepared forces with superior equipment and manpower.

Gladwell points out that all is not good with this technique if some fundamental safeguards are not applied. Four police officers in the dark entrance of a Bronx tenement pumped 41 shots into a scared and unarmed Guinea immigrant. When heart rates go up, cognitive reasoning goes down, according to Gladwell. Only seven seconds passed from the time the officers first saw the victim, called out to him, thought they saw a gun, pulled their guns and fired 41 shots into him. Quick decisions were made with fatal results. Mind-reading abilities were probably impaired by elevated heart rates causing a series of misjudgments to be made.

I highly recommend this book for a look into the world of decisions. We have to make them every day and we have to live with those made by others. Gladwell presents a well-researched study that is fascinating.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-08-04 01:16:08 EST)
07-30-08 5 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  View of the capacities of the subconcious
Reviewer Permalink
This book is excellent on the discovery of how the subconcious works, and can work for you. It is an interesting exploration. It also compares "intuition" with more obvious forms of over-analyzation, which our culture is taken over by. A real heads-up to what is going on around you.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-08-02 02:02:24 EST)
07-29-08 4 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  Blink and Branding
Reviewer Permalink
The Book on the Nightstand - July 08

The book falling off the nightstand this month is Blink: The Power of Thinking Without Thinking. The take-away from this text is why and how we make snap decisions, and to what degree these decisions should be trusted. I walked away with a solid understanding of the why and how, but less so on the trust and accuracy of snap decisions. Statistically you should go with your first "gut decision", except when you shouldn't. The text left me feeling vague in that area.

The Art of Digital Branding contrasts the Margaret Thatcher quote "I make my mind up about someone within the first ten seconds and I very seldom change it" with the research of psychologist Alexander Todorov, that "most people actually make a judgment about someone based on his facial appearance within one-tenth of a second", (page 27).

How is this used in design? A study by the Human-Oriented Technology Lab at Carleton University shows that "people can make an instinctive decision as to whether a web site is good or bad in 1/20th of a second", (page 34). An on-line consumer has made a decision to purchase within the first 40 seconds of entering a web site.

The design and balance of the first or home page of a site is critical, one of the primary metrics of Google Analytics is the "bounce rate". Bounce Rate is the percentage of single-page visits (i.e. visits in which the person left your site from the entrance page). Bounce Rate is a measure of visit quality and a high Bounce Rate generally indicates that site entrance (landing) pages aren't relevant to your visitors. A high bounce rate from the main page reflects that people fled your site after a fraction of a second that your material was unsuitable for them. Like the Prime Minister, they probably won't be back.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-08-02 02:02:24 EST)
07-26-08 2 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  No conclusion
Reviewer Permalink
Like someone allready said, it's a bunch of stories with no conclusion to it (and yes there even is a conclusion chapter.. but guess what.. it's another story)
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-07-30 01:16:33 EST)
07-26-08 3 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  Perverse obsession
Reviewer Permalink
A fascinating book, but as others have pointed out too many of the ideas here rely on anecdotal information. I got the feeling after a while that the author cherry-picked the stories he wanted to tell in order to bolster his thesis, and that another researcher could just as easily have formed a different thesis about decision making by selecting different stories.

Another thing about this book that struck me, as odd, was the author's obsession with a person's appearance, particularly whether the person was short or tall. Some of the descriptions are as follows.
P22, 'he is short and very charming'
P49, `he is a small and irrepressible man'
P61, `a tall, striking woman'
P73, `his bigness of frame'
P87, `who is both on the short side - five foot nine - and black'
P99, `is tall and lean with a gleaming bald dome'
P132, `is a tall man with a runner's slender build'
P148, `is very tall and strikingly handsome'
P190, `He was short and unassuming'
P197, `He was short and thick'
P202, `although he is of medium build, he seems much larger'
P251, `is tiny'

Seldom does the person's size matter to the thesis about decision making that the author presents. Even in the last example where a woman musician is described as `tiny', Gladwell admits that her size ought not to determine whether she is hired to play the French horn. Yet throughout the book he includes a person size as though it has some importance to his argument. This just struck me as perverse, and I wondered at his 'decision' for including this mostly useless information.

(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-07-30 01:16:33 EST)
07-25-08 2 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  Hyped book that ends up about nothing.
Reviewer Permalink
This book is full of promise and full of interesting stories. But ultimately, it doesn't even end up proving or disproving any of the ideas on its jacket.

Some people are good at trusting their instincts, and they end up right. Others are bad at trusting them. Other people's instincts themselves are untrustworthy. Other people don't trust their instincts. Some are right, some are wrong.

It's the equivalent of snob candy--it feels like an intellectual book, but it really doesn't say much of anything. It just makes you feel smart for a few minutes, if that.

I'd put money that no one will be talking about this book in two years. It's just the flavor of (last) month.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-07-26 01:15:26 EST)
07-25-08 2 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  Hyped book that ends up about nothing.
Reviewer Permalink
This book is full of promise and full of interesting stories. But ultimately, it doesn't even end up proving or disproving any of the ideas on its jacket.

Some people are good at trusting their instincts, and they end up right. Others are bad at trusting them. Other people's instincts themselves are untrustworthy. Other people don't trust their instincts. Some are right, some are wrong.

It's the equivalent of snob candy--it feels like an intellectual book, but it really doesn't say much of anything. It just makes you feel smart for a few minutes, if that.

I'd put money that no one will be talking about this book in two years. It's just the flavor of (last) month.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-07-30 01:16:33 EST)
07-23-08 4 1\1
(Hide Review...)  A Bit Long-Winded, But Worth It
Reviewer Permalink
Blink has changed the way I think about decision-making. From an early age we are discouraged from making "snap" decisions, we are not taught to develop our natural instincts. While some snap decisions can be mistakes, if we tune up our "gut" feelings, it may be possible to make excellent decisions based on limited information and time constraints. Gladwell calls this "thin-slicing" and make no mistake about it - it is a SKILL that must be cultivated.

In a nutshell, thin-slicing is defined as "the ability of our unconscious to find patterns in situations and behaviors based on very narrow slices of experience." The most fascinating part to me is just that - as a human being, we do have this capability. If you're like me, you do a significant amount of second-guessing, and that is where the trouble starts. We have the instincts inside of us, our brains are powerful tools - more powerful than the most sophisticated computer, they tell us, right? So why do we not trust ourselves?

To be honest, the book started out great with some fascinating examples of thin-slicing and adaptive unconscious (the part of the brain that leaps to conclusions and is capable of making very quick decisions based on very little information). Towards the end I felt like it was just the same information over and over again. I got the gist of it all in the first couple of chapters. Many reviewers here indicated that it could have been an article instead of a book, but I understand why it is a book: Books are taken seriously, are reviewed, are cited, and are easy to find after publication.

Blink is worth the read, even if you only skim a few parts, if only to get you thinking differently about the way we make decisions.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-07-26 01:15:26 EST)
07-22-08 3 1\1
(Hide Review...)  Mediocre at best
Reviewer Permalink
Gladwell is a writer for the New Yorker so it's not surprising that this entire book could have been summed up in an article. Gladwell basically says we should follow our instinct and concludes at the end that we shouldn't be judgemental at the same time. Wow, what insight! He gives some interesting examples which are what I enjoyed. It's a quick read though so you won't waste too much time even though the book is a little drawn out.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-07-26 01:15:26 EST)
07-22-08 3 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  agree with the reviewer who said this book was "mediocre"
Reviewer Permalink
Like the reviewer who posted just before me, I also thought the book could have made an excellent article. You can certainly skip around in this book and get the point of it. I forced myself to read the whole book even though I lost interest maybe halfway or 2/3 of the way through because the author seemed to be just supporting his main idea with more and more examples. I thought I should force myself to read the whole book in case I missed some amazing new insights, but there was nothing new in it. I enjoyed the examples though, which is why I give this book 3 stars. All in all it was truly mediocre at best.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-07-26 01:15:26 EST)
07-19-08 1 0\1
(Hide Review...)  not happey
Reviewer Permalink
one of he cd ()no 2
was dameged and in no shape for playing
its ashame i am not pleased at all

DR mishali moshe
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-07-22 02:26:47 EST)
07-06-08 3 1\1
(Hide Review...)  INTERESTING BUT NOT ESSENTIAL
Reviewer Permalink
Mr. Gladwell is very talented. He certainly did his homework on this one. At the end of the book though I was left wondering, "Okay...so what is the conclusion?" The book came to a rather abrupt ending and I couldn't tell if the author was for or against snap judgments.

My biggest disappointment is that there was no warning regarding explicit language. I was listening to this work on CD with my young daughters in the car when all of a sudden he starts using profane words in an effort to quote others. Was it necessary to include such language?
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-07-20 02:24:21 EST)
07-01-08 3 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  Not my favorite
Reviewer Permalink
Started out really liking it, but it suddenly started feeling suspiciously like a self-help book. I'm not crazy into that.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-07-06 22:14:26 EST)
06-20-08 5 17\17
(Hide Review...)  Our Hidden Programming
Reviewer Permalink


Malcolm Gladwell is a "gatekeeper." In his book, Blink, he opens the gate to a room of self-discovery - a room that allows the reader, perhaps for the first time, to realize that our actions and judgments often are not as "objective" as we might think. Mr. Gladwell, through a series of examples and stories, explains that we each have our own "programming" - dare I say "prejudices" - about how we (and the cultures we grow up in) judge and respond to things we "see" and "know to be true".

He also says there are other more benign, untainted impressions that come to us in the "blink" of an eye. About these untainted impressions he says: "We don't know where our first impressions come from or precisely what they mean, so we don't always appreciate their fragility." Implicitly he suggests that we also don't realize how powerful our "programming" is to potentially override and taint those benign and fragile first impressions.

Mr. Gladwell provides examples of what some people have done to preserve their "blink" experiences and offset their "pre-programming" - a fun read - I recommend it.

As I was reading through the book, I was reminded of two other books (both of which I highly recommend) by Ariel and Shya Kane. In Working on Yourself Doesn't Work: A Book About Instantaneous Transformation and Being Here: Modern Day Tales of Enlightenment, the authors include discussions of human mechanical behaviors - behaviors we absorb from our families and cultures at an early age. They point out that we are mostly unaware of these mechanics and until we become aware of them, they can influence and even "control" our behavior and life choices - very eye-opening and easy to read as well!

All three of these books are well worth reading - enjoy!
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-06-30 04:12:39 EST)
06-13-08 5 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  The Author is a Genius. He is a Thought Leader. He brings new concepts to debate, to the world.
Reviewer Permalink
This review will be brief, but decisive. Like the "blink" - the book's namesake.

blink - refers to the first few seconds (really two seconds) or less - moments really - in which split-second decisions are made. Often life and death decisions. Often decisions which are - by their nature - most often based on preconceptions, prejudice, prejudgment, or ingrained - evolved - subconscious beliefs, stereotypes, and conditioning.

The book, through several cases or examples, explores split-second decision making. Decision making when you are pressed. Decision making under great uncertainty - where all the facts are not known and you don't have time to get to know them. Decision making when you don't have time to reason - or to consciously really thinks out.

It is about how time constraints impact decisions. How they impact the quality of the decisions.

Where all you really have is your "intuition". Which is often right, but is also often wrong.

Through a case study-type analysis, Malcolm Gladwell, a brilliant thinker and writer - an original and ground breaking thinker - explores the issues related to these split-second or less than split-second decisions.

If are interested in learning about the brain, decisions, and human psychology and sociology, then I highly recommend this book. If you are not interested in any of the foregoing, but want to see a brilliant thinker and writer in action (Malcolm Gladwell), then I urge you to buy and read "blink".
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-06-21 03:03:55 EST)
06-11-08 4 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  Good collection of stories
Reviewer Permalink
For me, this book was a good collection of stories, that hold some useful idea in them. And that is really exciting. But, unfortunately, as it was said above, Gladwell fails to bring the general idea (at least until the few paragraphs at the end of the book) and usually whiffle between those short stories. What's good - he gives you some ideas of what you might want to explore more seriously later.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-06-13 03:03:57 EST)
06-08-08 3 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  May be readable, may be not. But certainly wont improve your intuition at all
Reviewer Permalink
Forgive my poor English. I would like to quote a passage on "Competing on analytics by Davenport and Harris" which wrote what I failed to express. Enjoy!

"It's ironic that a book praising intuition would arise and become popular just when many organisations are relying heavily on analytics, but then perhaps that's part of its romantic appeal. It is fun and persuasive, but it doesnt make clear that intuition is only appropriate under what circumstances. The author is undoubtedly correct, for example, that human beings evolved a capability to make accurate and quick decisions about each other's personality and intentions, and it's rare for formal analysis to do that as well. Yet even the author argues that intuitions is a good guide to action only when it's backed by many years of expertise. Any many of the author's examples of intuition are only possible because of years of analytical research in the background, such as Dr. John Gottsman's rapid and seemingly intutitive judgements of whether a married couple he observes will stay together. He's only able to make such assessment because he observed and statistically analyzed thousands of hours of videotaped intactions by couples. It's also clear that decision makers have to use intuition when they have no data and must make a very rapid decision - as in the author's example of police officers deciding whether to shot a suspect." pg13-14
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-06-12 00:21:32 EST)
  
                  Reader Reviews 1 - 50 of 330            Next
  
  
  
  
  
  

Because the data used to generate this site come from outside sources, VeryWellSaid.com cannot guarantee the completeness or accuracy of the data.
Search VeryWellSaid™
Google
Web VeryWellSaid™
New subjects are added every week.
View Subjects Below by:
* Top Selling
 (click category name, left)
* Top-Rated Top Sellers
 (click 'Top Rated', right)
In the news...  
Dubai\UAE Top Rated
Influenza\Bird Flu Top Rated
Iraq Top Rated
Supreme Court Top Rated
All Books Top Rated
Arts Top Rated
Photography Top Rated
Digital Photography Top Rated
Digital Cameras Top Rated
Biography Top Rated
Business Top Rated
Management Top Rated
Marketing Top Rated
Sales Top Rated
Stocks Top Rated
Bonds Top Rated
Real Estate Top Rated
Trading Top Rated