events had to take place in order for Jared to hit TV: The Subway
store manager had to be proactive enough to bring the magazine ar-
ticle to the creative director’s attention. (Would
your frontline peo-
ple do this?) The creative director had to be savvy enough to invest
resources in what could have been a fruitless errand. (Was this really
an errand with a good return on investment?) The president of the
ad agency had to make the spot
for free because he knew he was onto
something big. (Free!) The national Subway marketing team had to
swallow its pride and realize that it had made a mistake by not em-
bracing Jared earlier.
These are not trivial actions. This behavior is not routine. How
many great ideas have been extinguished
because someone in the mid-
dle—a link between the source of the idea and its eventual outlet—
dropped the ball? In the normal world, a franchise owner would have
been amused by the Jared tale. He would have tacked it up on the bul-
letin board, on the wall of the hallway leading to the bathroom, as a
source of amusement for his employees. And that would have been the
pinnacle of the Jared tale.
Jared reminds us that we don’t always have to
create sticky ideas.
Spotting them is often easier and more useful. What if history teachers
were diligent about sharing teaching methods
that worked brilliantly
in reaching students? What if we could count on the volunteers of
nonprofit organizations to be on the lookout for symbolic events or en-
counters that might inspire other people in the organization? What if
we could count on our bosses to take a gamble on important ideas?
You don’t have to admire Subway sandwiches to admire the process of
bringing a great idea to life.
T h e A r t o f S p o t t i n g
How do we make sure that we don’t let a great idea, a potential Jared,
float right under our nose? Spotting isn’t hard, but it isn’t natural,
either. Ideas don’t flag themselves to get our attention. We have to
224
M A D E T O S T I C K
consciously look for the right ones. So what is it, exactly, that we
should look for?
In
the introduction of the book, we discussed a study showing that
laypeople who’d been trained to use classic ad templates could create
ads that were vastly superior to those developed by an untrained
group. Just as there are ad templates that have been proven effective,
so, too, there are story templates that have been proven effective.
Learning the templates gives our spotting ability a huge boost.
Warren Buffett likes to tell the story of Rose Blumkin, a woman
who manages one of the businesses that he invested in. Blumkin is a
Russian
woman who, at age twenty-three, finagled her way past a bor-
der guard to come to America. She couldn’t speak English and had
received no formal schooling.
Blumkin started a furniture business in 1937 with $500 that she
had saved. Almost fifty years later, her furniture store was doing $100
million in annual revenue. At age one hundred, she was still on the
floor seven days a week. She actually
postponed her one-hundredth
birthday party until an evening when the store was closed. At one
point her competitors sued her for violating the fair-trade agreement
because her prices were so much lower. They thought she was selling
at a loss in order to put them out of business. Buffett says, “She
demonstrated to the court that she could profitably sell carpet at a
huge discount and sold the judge $1,400 worth of carpet.”
The story of Rose Blumkin isn’t from the book
Chicken Soup for
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