The Curse of Knowledge
A chapter summary from Made to Stick by Chip Heath & Dan Heath.
“The Heaths close the book with the underlying obstacle that the SUCCESs framework is trying to overcome: the Curse of Knowledge.”
The Heaths close the book with the underlying obstacle that the SUCCESs framework is trying to overcome: the Curse of Knowledge. Once you know something, you cannot un-know it, and you systematically over-estimate how easy it is for others to know it too. Experts become bad communicators in their own fields not because they have stopped trying but because they cannot remember what it was like to not understand.
The Tappers-and-Listeners experiment is the canonical demonstration. Subjects asked to tap out a familiar song on a table predict, on average, that 50% of listeners will recognize it. Actual recognition rate: about 2.5%. The tapper hears the song in their own head while tapping; the listener hears only the taps. The gap is enormous and invisible to the person who knows the song.
The cure is structural, not personal. You cannot stop being cursed; you can design around the curse. The SUCCESs framework — Simple, Unexpected, Concrete, Credible, Emotional, Stories — is essentially a checklist of techniques that compensate for the curse by forcing you to communicate in ways that work for the uncursed listener.
The book's closing argument is that being a good communicator is not a talent but a craft. The craft can be learned. The audience does not have to be lost to abstraction, jargon, and forgetfulness; the communicator just has to be willing to do the work that the curse otherwise makes them skip.
The book closes on the single obstacle the whole SUCCESs framework exists to defeat: the Curse of Knowledge, the fact that once you know something you can no longer imagine what it is like not to know it, and so you systematically overestimate how obvious it is to everyone else. Their unforgettable evidence is the tappers-and-listeners experiment, in which people tapping out the rhythm of a famous song estimated that listeners would identify it about half the time, when in reality only about two and a half percent could — the tappers heard the melody in their heads and could not conceive that the listeners heard only disconnected knocks. This is why experts so often become poor communicators in their own fields: not from lack of effort but because they cannot recover the beginner's mind, defaulting to abstraction and jargon. The Heaths frame the two great villains of sticky ideas as burying the lead, a failure of Simple, and the Curse of Knowledge that infects everything else. Their hopeful conclusion is that the SUCCES checklist is precisely the systematic antidote — a learnable discipline, not an inborn gift — that anyone can run to drag their ideas back out of expert abstraction and into a form that sticks.
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