Last week, I finished reading At Random: The Reminiscences of Bennett Cerf. It’s Bennett Cerf’s autobiography, and it details how Cerf founded and grew book publisher Random House. Cerf was a colorful entrepreneur who lived an exciting life. Being one of the few people who influenced the distribution of knowledge by choosing what books to publish put him in a unique position. If Cerf and other publishers didn’t publish a particular book, the public never had the opportunity to read it. People were attracted to him and his influential knowledge distribution, which allowed him to build relationships with notable people, including U.S. presidents and movie stars.
Cerf founded Random House in 1927, and he died in 1971. Things have changed drastically since then. Companies such as Scribe Media and Amazon’s Kindle Direct Publishing now make it easy for authors to publish their books. More books are being published, but discovery is more challenging for books that don’t have significant marketing resources.
After reading Cerf’s book and thinking about how the industry has changed, it’s clear to me that people who curate and help others discover books can bring immense value to readers. Those who excel at this can build powerful magnets that attract others to them. By attracting others to them, they will likely also attract unique opportunities and build relationships with notable people like Cerf did. Said differently, curation and helping others with discovery is a way to create magnetic luck.