Who better to turn to for advice than the late Steve Jobs?
Luckily for us reporter Brent Schlender, who in the past had spoken with
Jobs at length on a number of occasions, has uncovered and revealed a series of
interviews that have never before been aired.
The interviews were recorded during the time Jobs was shunned out of
Apple, the company he was co-founder of. Schlender
points out that during the time the interviews took place Jobs had matured to
become a better manager and boss, and “found a way to turn his native
stubbornness into a productive perseverance”.
“Perhaps most
importantly, he developed an astonishing adaptability that was critical to the
hit-after-hit-after-hit climb of Apple's last decade. All this, during a time
many remember as his most disappointing.”
Patrick Stafford
from SmartCompany discusses the five
best and valuable comments from these newly revealed tapes:
1. The
differences between Hollywood and Silicon Valley
When Jobs left
started Pixar after leaving Apple he had to learn some new skills making films
rather than technology.
"Hollywood and
Silicon Valley are like two ships passing in the night. They are not trading
passengers. They speak a different jargon; they have grown up with completely
different models for how to grow a business, for how to attract and retain employees,
for everything.”
He added:
“They've grown up
with completely different role models, and so the people think entirely
differently. I mean, when you're in Silicon Valley, you don't have to explain
Silicon Valley to anyone else because everybody's here and understands it. And
the same is evidently true of Hollywood – neither side can explain themselves
to the other very well at all.”
2. The secret to
hiring great people
Despite being
recognised as being an incredibly stubborn and demanding boss Jobs always felt strongly
about working with the best people. Below he explains his mentality behind the hiring
process in getting the best people.
"In most
businesses, the difference between average and good is at best two to one,
right? Like, if you go to New York and you get the best cab driver in the city,
you might get there 30% faster than with an average taxicab driver. A two to
one gain would be pretty big. The difference between the best worker on
computer hardware and the average may be two to one, if you're lucky. With
automobiles, maybe two to one. But in software, it's at least 25 to one. The difference
between the average programmer and a great one is at least that.”
He added:
"The secret of
my success is that we have gone to exceptional lengths to hire the best people
in the world. And when you're in a field where the dynamic range is 25 to one,
boy, does it pay off."
3. The future of
music subscriptions
One of Jobs great
achievements was how he transformed the music industry with the introduction of
iTunes. However, before the existence of iTunes Jobs had some insightful thoughts
on what consumers want to do with their music products:
"Nobody wants
to subscribe to music. They've bought it for 50 years. They bought 45s, they
bought LPs, they bought 8-tracks, they bought cassettes, they bought CDs. Why
now do they want to start renting their music? People like to buy it and they
like to do what they damn well please with it when they buy it.”
4. Why good
management is like the Beatles
One of Jobs great loves
in life was the Beatles. Being a huge fan of the Beatles, Jobs was determined to
get the band’s discography on iTunes. Below, he explains why his model of
management takes after the famous band, with no employee allowing another to go
off in a different direction.
"They sort of
kept each other in check. And then when they split up, they never did anything
as good. It was the chemistry of a small group of people, and that chemistry
was greater than the sum of the parts.”
He added:
“And so John kept
Paul from being a teenybopper and Paul kept John from drifting out into the
cosmos, and it was magic. And George, in the end, I think provided a tremendous
amount of soul to the group. I don't know what Ringo did.”
5. Remembering
stories, rather than products
Jobs learned one
key lesson while working in films. What he learned was ‘people remember
stories, rather than individual products. He said:
"The
technology we've been laboring on over the past 20 years becomes part of the
sedimentary layer… But when Snow White was re-released [on
DVD, in 2001], we were one of the 28 million families that went out and bought
a copy of it. This was a film that is 60-years-old, and my son was watching it
and loving it. I don't think anybody's going to be beating on a Macintosh 60
years from now."
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