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Good to Great, by Jim Collins
Are You a Hedgehog or a Fox?
Chapter 5, pages 9091
The fox is a cunning creature, able to
devise a myriad of complex strategies for sneak attacks upon the
hedgehog. Day in and day out, the fox circles around the hedgehogs
den, waiting for the perfect moment to pounce. Fast, sleek, beautiful,
fleet of foot, and craftythe fox looks like the sure winner.
The hedgehog, on the other hand, is a dowdier creature, looking
like a genetic mix-up between a porcupine and a small armadillo.
He waddles along, going about his simple day, searching for lunch
and taking care of his home.
The fox waits in cunning silence at the juncture in the trail.
The hedgehog, minding his own business, wanders right into the
path of the fox. Aha, Ive got you now! thinks
the fox. He leaps out, bounding across the ground, lightning fast.
The little hedgehog, sensing danger, looks up and thinks, Here
we go again. Will he ever learn? Rolling up into a perfect
little ball, the hedgehog becomes a sphere of sharp spikes, pointing
outward in all directions. The fox, bounding toward his prey,
sees the hedgehog defense and calls off the attack. Retreating
back to the forest, the fox begins to calculate a new line of
attack. Each day, some version of this battle between the hedgehog
and the fox takes place, and despite the greater cunning of the
fox, the hedgehog always wins.
Berlin extrapolated from this little parable to divide people
into two basic groups: foxes and hedgehogs. Foxes pursue many
ends at the same time and see the world in all its complexity.
They are scattered or diffused, moving on many levels,
says Berlin, never integrating their thinking into one overall
concept or unifying vision. Hedgehogs, on the other hand, simplify
a complex world into a single organizing idea, a basic principle
or concept that unifies and guides everything. It doesnt
matter how complex the world, a hedgehog reduces all challenges
and dilemmas to simpleindeed almost simplistichedgehog
ideas. For a hedgehog, anything that does not somehow relate to
the hedgehog idea holds no relevance.
Princeton professor Marvin Bressler pointed out the power of
the hedgehog during one of our long conversations: You want
to know what separates those who make the biggest impact from
all the others who are just as smart? Theyre hedgehogs.
Freud and the unconscious, Darwin and natural selection, Marx
and class struggle, Einstein and relativity, Adam Smith and division
of laborthey were all hedgehogs. They took a complex world
and simplified it. Those who leave the biggest footprints,
said Bressler, have thousands calling after them, Good
idea, but you went too far! 3
To be clear, hedgehogs are not stupid. Quite the contrary. They
understand that the essence of profound insight is simplicity.
What could be more simple than e = mc2? What could be simpler
than the idea of the unconscious, organized into an id, ego, and
superego? What could be more elegant than Adam Smiths pin
factory and invisible hand? No, the hedgehogs arent
simpletons; they have a piercing insight that allows them to see
through complexity and discern underlying patterns. Hedgehogs
see what is essential, and ignore the rest.
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