Posted on 04/08/2019 10:37:23 AM PDT by Red Badger
Ive had a long and exciting journey full of failures and successes since I first started working at Apple in 1983. I was part of the original Macintosh team and had two stints at the company (one from 1983 to 1987, and then from 1995 to 1997).
Ask people who worked at Apple when Steve Jobs was around, and theyll very bluntly tell you it wasnt easy. There were days where he was impressed by my work, and there were days when I was certain he would fire me. But it was always exciting because we were on a mission to prevent totalitarianism. (You can read more about my adventures in my new book, Wise Guy: Lessons from a Life. )
I wouldnt trade working for him for any job Ive ever had and I dont know anyone in the Macintosh Division who would, either. My job as a software evangelist in the Macintosh Division defined my career.
Here are the top 11 life-changing lessons that I learned at Apple: 1. Only excellence matters
Jobs elevated women to positions of power long before it was cool or socially responsible to do so. He didnt care about gender, sexual orientation, race, creed or color. He divided the world into two groups: Insanely great people and crappy people. It was that simple. 2. Customers cant tell you what they need
In the early 1980s, Apple was selling Apple IIs. If you asked customers what they wanted, they would say a bigger, faster and cheaper Apple II. No one would have asked for a Mac. 3. Innovation happens on the next curve
Macintosh was the next curve in personal computing. It wasnt merely an improvement to the Apple II or MS‑DOS curve. Innovation isnt making a slightly better status quo. Its about jumping to the next curve. 4. Design counts
It may not count for everyone, but design counts for many people. Jobs was obsessed with great design. He drove us nuts with his attention to detail, but that is what made Apple successful. 5. Less is more
One of the key tenets of Jobs obsession with design was the belief that less is more. He was the minimalists minimalist. You can even see this in his slides: They had dark blue or black backgrounds with 90 to 190 point text and no more than a handful of words. 6. Big challenges beget big accomplishments
The goal of the Macintosh Division was preventing totalitarianism and worldwide domination by IBM. Merely shipping yet another computer was never the goal. 7. Changing your mind is a sign of intelligence
When Jobs announced the iPhone, it was a closed programming system to ensure that it was safe and reliable. A year later, he opened it up to third-party apps, and iPhone sales skyrocketed. This was a 180 degree reversal and a sign of intelligence and courage.
8. Engineers are artists
Jobs treated engineers like artists. They werent cogs in a machine whose output was measured in lines of code. Macintosh was an artistic expression by engineers whose palette was software and hardware design. 9. Price and value are not the same thing
No one ever bought a Macintosh based on price. Its true value became evident only when you factored in the lower requirements for support and training. Jobs didnt fight on price, but he won on value. 10. But value isnt enough
Many products are valuable, but if your product isnt also unique or differentiated in some way, you have to compete on price. You can succeed this way as Dell did, for example. But if you truly want to dent the universe, your product needs to be both unique and valuable. 11. Some things need to be believed to be seen
Innovators ignore naysayers to get the job done. The experts told Jobs he was wrong many times for example, Macintosh, iPod, iPhone and Apple retail stores. Its not that Jobs was always right, but sometimes, you need to believe in something in order to see it.
I hope that everyone has at least one chance to work for someone as brilliant as Steve Jobs. It wont be easy, but what doesnt end your career makes it stronger.
Guy Kawasaki is the chief evangelist of Canva. Previously, Kawasaki was chief evangelist of Apple. He has written fifteen books, including The Art of the Start, Selling the Dream and his latest, Wise Guy: Lessons from a Life. Follow him on Twitter .
*This is an adapted excerpt from Wise Guy: Lessons from a Life, by Guy Kawasaki, and with permission of Portfolio, an imprint of Penguin Publishing Group, a division of Penguin Random House LLC.
I choose a lazy person to do a hard job. Because a lazy person will find an easy way to do it.
Bill Gates
Long before Bill Gates, a co-worker said that was S-O-P on a US Navy ship he served on, for the same reason.
That must mean that a lazy genius is ideal.
In general, you are correct when one is selling to specific, to order engineering. It does not apply when one is creating newly conceptualized products the public is not currently using or buying. If the customer has no idea he or she or it (a company) could benefit from some new product, it is usually impossible for them to specify what that non-existent product will do for them or even what it should provide.
One prime example of this is the personal computer itself. It is indeed remarkable that no science fiction writer of the past, people who are skilled at looking toward future technology and prognosticating future gadgets, ever predicted the ubiquitous promulgation of personal computing. Not one. Some came close to an Internet like central computer that provides accurate, moderated information from a central mainframe, but nothing at all like the universal tool the internet has actually developed into. People had no idea they would need the internet until they needed it. They could not have described it as a need or even a want.
I sat through 2 Kawaski “AppleVangelical” presentations the early 90s...
first one was spell binding, 2nd not so much.
...Kawasaki...:
The only one I see doing unattributed "cutting and pasting" here is you, Okie. Everything Ive written here, except attributed quotations and examples of actual screen shots, is my original work and is factual.
Makes a half a world of difference . . . One is Eastern European derivation, the other Japanese derived. LOL!
You do not have to be the best.
“Windows” has about 90% of the market.
Android too dominates.
Apple didnt invent the GUI. Xerox did many years before.
I read that Apple *paid to see it* and made their own that was better and brought it to market.
#14 We have a guy in the office who complains and complains about his co-workers at the other office and will hit the hold button on a call he is on and complain about the caller.
He is also very sarcastic to people who ask him questions.
The manager likes to insult the employees so he sees potential in that guy I guess.
So naturally he promoted that guy to supervisor....
If the person was not there?
When that guy has a day off the place is very quiet.
He is the loudest person there. Bitch bitch bitch all day long.
Im a graphic designer that works mostly with editors and sometimes clients. Ill admit that maybe Im not the best guy for sussing out requirements. But it surprises me how many want to have [Nikes] success and think its all in cool logos and slick marketing. They point to the success of others and say, I want what they have. Make that for me.
A lot of people are long on feeling and desire and thats what they express when they want or need something. Its easy to to please someone who really does know what they need/require and they recognize that you are the person who can get them where they want to go if you do/supply these things.
They see their goal, know what they lack in achieving it, and know that youre the person to meet the need by doing x, y, and z. Get that done and everybody walks away a winner. Theyre not as common as they should be.
I agree. At least figure out ways to make the 80% help the 20% become insanely greater and let them have a slice of that insanely great glory.
BS
Very cogent, fact filled argument you have there to counter my REAL facts which I posted to counter your lie. Just posting "BS" without posting any proof shows you have ZERO facts to post and really are at a loss for evidence to support your position. I CAN back my claims with evidence and links for everything I posted. You cant.
When openings four 200 more jobs became available, over 8000 job applicants lined up to get hired. That is not the sign of a slave labor market.
Incidentally, my degree is in Economics. I know what Im talking about. You obviously dont have a clue.
I don’t need a cogent argument to counter your celebration of an evil company. One which gleefully spies on you and seditiously betrays the Republic. I’ll let you glow in your wondrous ‘intellect’ and embrace the prodigious fantasy of Apple and all its grandeur. Just be smug with that—which I’m sure you are. And no, I never bothered to read your first ‘thesis’.
My MBA trumps your economics. And why should I be impressed with that? Even Always On Crack (AOC)claims this.
Absolutely amazing. You gloat about your know nothing attitude and then demonstrate yet again how factually challenged you are. Apparently actual facts dont mean a damn thing to your hermetically SEALED, CLOSED, and deliberately IGNORANT MIND. Just like a Social Justice Warrior, you believe everything propagandists have poured into your head. He who refuses to learn facts isnt just ignorant; he is stupid.
You are the AOC on this thread, that makes you AOCHilltopper. Are you certain you dont belong in the DU website instead of FR?
Let me try once again using a pick axe on this brick wall of ignorance youve swallowed once again.
"One which gleefully spies on you and seditiously betrays the Republic."
WOW! Exactly what is your evidence that Apple spies on its customers. Be specific.
Your absolutely astounding, abysmal IGNORANCE and, frankly, lack of any factual evidence for any of that sentence is blinding to, and quite ironic, considering your invocation of Xandy Occasional-Cortex in a misdirected ad hominem attack on me.
Are you sure you are not mistaking Apple for Google/Alphabet in the gleeful spying department since Apple does not treat their customers like product as Google does? As for "betraying the Republic", If youre still stuck on the San Bernardino Terrorist iPhone case, then YOU dont know the facts or the law involved. . . such as:
(1) Apple complied with every legal search warrant for data in their control presented to them including every iota of data in Syed Farouks iCloud account;
(2) As soon as Apple learned that an iPhone had been recovered as evidence in the terrorist attack, Apple, even without a search warrant, volunteered its assistance in unlocking the iPhone 5C issued by the San Bernardino County Department of Heath to Syed Farouk. That assistance was roundly rejected by the FBI authorities and local police authorities who preferred to let the IT department at San Bernardino Department of Health, along with FBI agents, attempt to unlock it instead. Those "experts" succeeded in changing the AppleID associated with Syed Farouks account and that iPhone which made Apples ability to directly unlock that specific iPhone 5C impossible;
(3)The FBI then went to a Federal Magistrate Judge to get an All Writs Court Order (completely different from a search warrant the ignorant press characterized it as) to require Apple to actually write a version of iOS, which some referred to as FBiOS, that would bypass all security lockouts and encryption on iPhones, iPads, and iPod touches and hand it over to the FBI. This was, as the US Supreme Court has ruled in prior cases, an impermissible use of the All Writs Order in that the courts cannot order anyone to provide a service which is not something they do not provide in their ordinary course of business, nor can the courts order a business to do something, benefiting the court or public, that would damage the business or its reputation. The All Writs Order as issued by the Federal Magistrate required Apple to provide to the FBI a custom designed operating system, something Apple does not provide to anyone in the ordinary course of its business of selling computer and cellular phone hardware, and writing and promulgating an insecure OS designed to break Apples signature and advertised garrantee of customer security;
(4) In addition, the courts and the Department of Justice were precluded by the CALEA Federal Law, passed in 1995, from demanding from a telecommunications manufacturer the modification of any communication equipment or software which is designed to protect encryption or user security. Apple is just such a telecommunication manufacturer which falls under the CALEA Law;
(5) Ergo, the All Writs Court Order to force Apple to hand over to the FBI a universal iPhone unlocking key, was on its face an illegal order, violating existing Federal Law, and the Constitution. . . which was validated by no less than two appellate circuits.
BS
ROTFLMAO!
You are such a fool.
“The public has no idea what it wants”... said every pompous inventor ever.
Inventors/mangers/investors start with a vision of what the customer WOULD WANT or WOULD NEED. I-Pod for instance was based on a want. Who would not want their entire music collection in the palm of their hands? An inventor who does not create based on a want or need will become poor very quickly.
Jobs had some failures, guess what, those failures resulted in the public not wanting or needing them. Successes were the exact opposite, the public responded to the products usefulness of their wants and needs.
How many world wide industry changing consumer products have YOU invented much less brought to market, Rollo? What makes you an expert on such products that the consuming public had not yet perceived they even had a want for, much less such a great desire for that would cause the public to spend billions of hard earned dollars to buy? My guess is exactly ZERO.
Youre right that Steve Jobs has some failures, but how about you actually naming Jobs "failures" which he actually brought to market. . . you cant even properly spell the name of one of his most successful products lines, but deign to criticize one of his statements that made him a success.
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