An expert is, as an expert does
After seeing so many amazing experts during the research of this Chicago guide book I just worked on, I remembered a thought about the idea of expertise I had a while back.
To me, it’s always just made sense to find and make friends with experts. I love experts and I’d like to think that I’m and expert too (at least a few areas). And by expert I mean someone that is extremely passionate in their love of any topic. Whether that’s a professional expertise in software or engineering, or a personal expertise in sneakers. Many times you don’t get paid to be an expert in your area of interest. But it’s great if you are. So when I look for advice, tips or the inside scoop on anything (music, consumer electronics, fashion) I seek out those experts and make them my friends.
I’ve always been attracted to the idea of being a specialist. It’s inherent that you put yourself (and more importantly, your point of view) into a smaller group of the populace. And the greater expertise you gain in your field of interest the greater the potential for a demand for your point of view. Now of course, being an expert in the mating habits of the Peruvian mole rat might not get you on the guest list of many post-Oscar award night celebrations, but I’d like to think that within Peruvian mole rat circles, you were Big Man On Campus (BMOC).
I’d love to one day make a study (perhaps a documentary) about what common threads there are between all experts. Is there similar personality profile between experts in astrophysics and criminal psychology? Is it the pursuit of knowledge to the Nth degree? How much of one’s ego drives someone to be a specialist?

Reminds me of the old saw: an expert is someone who knows more and more about less and less, until he knows absolutely everything about nothing
Seth Godin talks about expertise the way you describe it as ‘otaku’ -loosely Japanese for obsession, expertise as passion rather than vocation.
A quote from an article of his in Fast Company:”An otaku is a person with an obsession. There are thousands of people who are hot sauce otaku. There are no mustard otaku.”
Comment by thisislarry — May 19, 2006 @ 3:54 pm
You know, I read some silly statistic that said that if you dedicated your life for three to four years reading everything there is to know about a subject, you would become a world authority. I always found that surprisingly attainable. geekily inspirational you know.
I guess the trick might be to be just enough of an expert in a wide variety of areas so that you don’t make your self obsolete.
Comment by est1976 — May 22, 2006 @ 10:01 am