Range

I’ve just started David Epstein’s new bestseller, Range: Why Generalists Triumph in a Specialized World, and am delighted to learn that it confirms all of my opinions.

In 2014, I included some of the findings about late specialization in sports in the afterword of my first book, The Sports Gene. The following year, I got an invitation to talk about that research from an unlikely audience—not athletes or coaches, but military veterans. In preparation, I perused scientific journals for work on specialization and career-swerving outside of the sports world. I was struck by what I found. One study showed that early career specializers jumped out to an earnings lead after college, but that later specializers made up for the head start by finding work that better fit their skills and personalities. I found a raft of studies that showed how technological inventors increased their creative impact by accumulating experience in different domains, compared to peers who drilled more deeply into one; they actually benefited by proactively sacrificing a modicum of depth for breadth as their careers progressed. There was a nearly identical finding in a study of artistic creators.

  • Range: Why Generalists Triumph in a Specialized World (link)

  • Zack Lowe interview with Epstein on The Lowe Post. (link)

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