Chip Heath on Making Numbers Count cover

Chip Heath on Making Numbers Count

Master the art of turning data into stories that captivate and compel with renowned author Chip Heath in 'Making Numbers Count'.

Instructor: ProSkills.training

Language: English with multi-language support

Validity Period: Lifetime

$9.99

Transform Your Data into Unforgettable Insights: Master the Art of Communicating Numbers!

Are you ready to make your numbers count and influence decisions like never before? In today's data-driven world, the ability to communicate statistics and figures effectively is paramount for business success, societal understanding, and even personal conversations. ProSkills.training proudly presents "Chip Heath on Making Numbers Count", a powerful 9-lesson course developed by Stanford Graduate School of Business Professor Chip Heath and co-authored with journalist Karla Starr. This course is your essential guide to transforming complex data into clear, compelling, and memorable messages.

Why are Numbers So Hard to Understand? Uncover the Cognitive Truths Most people, including about half who don't consider themselves "numbers people," struggle with numerical comprehension. Our brains are not naturally wired for large numbers; phenomena like "subitizing" show we can only instantly recognise quantities up to about five without counting. Beyond that, numbers become abstract, losing their intuitive meaning. For example, the staggering difference between a million and a billion is often not viscerally understood; a million dollars spent at $50,000 a day lasts 20 days, but a billion lasts 55 years. Moreover, human working memory is limited, typically processing only five to nine pieces of information at a time, making complex strings of digits difficult to recall. As numbers climb, a phenomenon called "psychological numbing" can set in, leading to indifference towards large-scale suffering or problems. This course tackles these inherent challenges head-on.

Your Blueprint for Impactful Number Communication: Chip Heath, known for his work on "sticky messages," initially avoided numbers, but a challenge from a finance student inspired him to develop these groundbreaking strategies. You will learn to apply the "art and science" of communicating numbers through five core lessons:

  • Making Numbers Easier to Understand (User-Friendly): Discover why simpler, rounded "ballpark" figures are often more understandable and "stickier" than exact, complex numbers for general audiences. Learn from the real-world example of A&W's "one-third-pound burger" failure, demonstrating how people struggle with fractions.
  • Taking Numbers From Abstract to Concrete: Transform abstract numbers into vivid, tangible concepts that appeal to the senses and are easy to visualise. Learn to convert vast quantities, like the concrete used for Hoover Dam, into relatable images such as paving a highway from San Francisco to New York City. You'll even learn to "lose the numbers" entirely, like describing the Great Wall of China's length as walking from Miami to Seattle, then to Chicago.
  • The Rule of One: Simplify overwhelming aggregate numbers by breaking them down to an individual level. Understand the national debt not as "trillions," but as approximately $82,000 per citizen, making it more personally graspable. You'll also learn to turn abstract averages into compelling stories about a single, relatable person.
  • Mapping Numbers on Familiar Dimensions: Give numbers context and meaning by drawing comparisons to familiar, everyday elements. Visualise probabilities, like "one in a million," by thinking of finding a specific word in six volumes of the Harry Potter series. Understand wealth distribution disparity by mapping it onto relatable scenarios like dividing apartments, M&Ms, or even bottled water.

This course, "Chip Heath on Making Numbers Count," is presented in partnership with the Next Big Idea Club and includes graded assessments to solidify your learning. By mastering these communication strategies, you will gain the ability to illuminate pressing issues in business, society, and the environment, ensuring your data insights are not just understood, but also motivational for action.

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