What’s the unique attribute that world-class performers and US memory champs share?
Having never taken a business class in college, I find myself constantly trying to “catch up” by reading and listening to book after book on marketing, leadership, sales and running your business.
I recently finished two good business books that I wanted to share.
Just by chance I happened to read and listen to them back to back, which was interesting because even though they were on different topics, they referenced some of the same research and mined the same fields.
The first one is Talent is Overrated: What Really Separates World-Class Performers from Everybody Else, by Geoff Colvin. Sorry, slackers, but the answer is hard work. The book states it’s not innate talent, but rather thousands of hours of deliberate practice that creates world-class performers. It touches upon some of the same ideas that Malcom Gladwell’s Outliers goes over.
Along the way it also pokes holes in the “god given talent” stories of such child prodigies as Mozart and Tiger Woods, showing how they had to put in the same hard work that everyone else does who wants to be a world class performer.
The book also looks at developing talent through the eyes of a leader or manager, and ends with the question: why would anyone subject themselves to such a regimen of hard work? What separates world-class performers from the rest of the population.
Although at times the book seems to overstate it’s case, it’s an interesting read…or listen.
Just as I was wrapping up that book I stumbled upon Moonwalking with Einstein: The Art and Science of Remembering Everything by Josh Foer. It’s the true story of a journalist with average memory who stumbles upon the US Memory Championship. He’s fascinated by these people who can remember the order of a mixed deck of cards in just a few minutes or hundreds of random numbers. A year later he wins the US Memory championship himself.
The writing is excellent throughout, and although it’s not really a how-to on memory tricks, there’s plenty of good tips throughout. It made me want to dig deeper. He interviews the man with the worst memory (it’s not me, as it turns out), Kim Peek, the inspiration for Dustin Hoffman’s Rain Man, and looks into how the importance of memorization has evolved over the years, especially now where we carry computers around in our pants.
As I mentioned, the book collides in theme with Talent is Overrated: as he starts training for the US memory championship he starts learning more about deliberate practice, and again the idea that almost anyone can become a world-class performer if they’re willing to put in the hours AND if they use deliberate practice to get there.
I strongly recommend either of these two books for business owners, and Moonwalking for everyone as it is just a pleasurable read.






