SlideShare a Scribd company logo
Learning Technology
Leadership from Steve Jobs
By
Dr. Syed Hassan Amin
Cornerstones of Steve Jobs Leadership
• Focus
• Simplify
• Responsibility to the End
• When behind, leapfrog, innovate
• Products before Profit
• Customers don’t know what they
want
• Bend Reality
• Impute
• Push for perfection
• Tolerate only “A” players
• Engage face-to-face
• Know both the big picture and
the details
• Stay Hungary, stay foolish
“It doesn’t make sense to hire smart people
and then tell them what to do; we hire smart
people so they can tell us what to do.” - Steve
Jobs
Focus
• When Jobs returned to Apple in 1997, it was producing a random array of
computers and peripherals, including a dozen different versions of the
Macintosh.
• After a few weeks of product review sessions, he’d finally had enough.
“Stop!” he shouted. “This is crazy.”
• He grabbed a Magic Marker, padded in his bare feet to a whiteboard, and
drew a two-by-two grid. “Here’s what we need,” he declared.
• Atop the two columns, he wrote “Consumer” and “Pro.”
• He labeled the two rows “Desktop” and “Portable.” Their job, he told his team
members, was to focus on four great products, one for each quadrant.
Simplicity
• Jobs aimed for the simplicity that comes from conquering, rather than
merely ignoring, complexity.
• “Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication,” declared Apple’s first
marketing brochure.
• When designing GUI based computer, Jobs went to a local industrial
design firm and told one of its founders, Dean Hovey, that he wanted
a simple, single-button model that cost $15.
• “To be truly simple, you have to go really deep”, Johny Ive
Take Responsibilities to the End
• Jobs knew that the best way to achieve simplicity was to make sure
that hardware, software, and peripheral devices were seamlessly
integrated.
• An Apple ecosystem—an iPod connected to a Mac with iTunes
software, for example—allowed devices to be simpler, syncing to be
smoother, and glitches to be rarer.
• The more complex tasks, such as making new playlists, could be done
on the computer, allowing the iPod to have fewer functions and
buttons.
When Behind, Leap Frog
• Original iMac was designed for managing a user’s photos and videos, but it was
left behind when dealing with music.
• People with PCs were downloading and swapping music and then ripping and
burning their own CDs.
• The iMac’s slot drive couldn’t burn CDs.
• But instead of merely catching up by upgrading the iMac’s CD drive, he decided
to create an integrated system that would transform the music industry.
• The result was the combination of iTunes, the iTunes Store, and the iPod, which
allowed users to buy, share, manage, store, and play music better than they
could with any other devices.
• One challenge to iPod was that mobile phone makers would start adding music
players to their handsets.
• Steve Jobs cannibalized iPod sales by creating the iPhone. “If we don’t
cannibalize ourselves, someone else will,” he said.
Put Products before Profit
• Jobs theory about Decline of Great Companies :
• They make some great products, but then the sales and marketing people
take over the company, because they are the ones who can juice up profits.
• When the sales guys run the company, the product guys don’t matter so
much, and a lot of them just turn off.
• It happened at Apple when Sculley came in, which was my fault, and it
happened when Ballmer took over at Microsoft.
Don’t be Slave to Focus Groups
• When Jobs took his original Macintosh team on its first retreat, one
member asked whether they should do some market research to see
what customers wanted.
• No,” Jobs replied, “because customers don’t know what they want until
we’ve shown them.”
• He invoked Henry Ford’s line “If I’d asked customers what they
wanted, they would have told me, ‘A faster horse!’”
• Jobs believed in intuition :“Intuition is a very powerful thing—more
powerful than intellect, in my opinion.”
Bend Reality
• Jobs’s (in)famous ability to push people to do the impossible was
dubbed by colleagues his Reality Distortion Field.
• An early example was when Jobs was on the night shift at Atari and
pushed Steve Wozniak to create a game called Breakout.
• Woz said it would take months, but Jobs stared at him and insisted he could
do it in four days.
• Woz knew that was impossible, but he ended up doing it.
• Jobs convinced Corning to manufacture gorilla glass in less than six
months, although they claimed it can not be done !
Push for Perfection
• During the development of almost every product he ever created, Jobs at a certain
point “hit the pause button” and went back to the drawing board because he felt it
wasn’t perfect.
• iPhone
• The initial design had the glass screen set into an aluminum case.
• One Monday morning Jobs went over to see Ive. “I didn’t sleep last night,” he said, “because I
realized that I just don’t love it.”
• Ive, to his dismay, instantly saw that Jobs was right.
• iPad
• At one point Jobs looked at the model and felt slightly dissatisfied. It didn’t seem casual and
friendly enough to scoop up and whisk away.
• They needed to signal that you could grab it with one hand, on impulse. They decided that the
bottom edge should be slightly rounded, so that a user would feel comfortable just snatching it up
rather than lifting it carefully.
• That meant engineering had to design the necessary connection ports and buttons in a thin,
simple lip that sloped away gently underneath. Jobs delayed the product until the change could
be made.
Tolerate only “A” Players
• Steve Jobs was one of the toughest bosses who said :-
• I’ve learned over the years that when you have really good people, you don’t
have to baby them,”
• By expecting them to do great things, you can get them to do great things.
Ask any member of that Mac team. They will tell you it was worth the pain.”
Most of them do.
• It’s important to appreciate that Jobs’s rudeness and roughness were
accompanied by an ability to be inspirational.
• Jobs infused Apple employees with an abiding passion to create
groundbreaking products and a belief that they could accomplish
what seemed impossible.
Engage Face to Face
• Jobs was a strong believer in face-to-face meetings.
• Creativity comes from spontaneous meetings, from random
discussions.
Know both the Big Picture and Details
• Time Warner CEO Jeff Bewkes says that one of Jobs’s salient traits was his
ability and desire to envision overarching strategy while also focusing on the
tiniest aspects of design.
• For example, in 2000 he came up with the grand vision that the personal
computer should become a “digital hub” for managing all of a user’s music,
videos, photos, and content, and thus got Apple into the personal-device
business with the iPod and then the iPad.
• In 2010 he came up with the successor strategy—the “hub” would move to
the cloud—and Apple began building a huge server farm so that all a user’s
content could be uploaded and then seamlessly synced to other personal
devices.
• But even as he was laying out these grand visions, he was fretting over the
shape and color of the screws inside the iMac.
Stay Hungry, Stay Foolish
• Stay Hungry
• Be ambitious !
• Have a want, or need to feel like what you have right now isn't enough.
• You can always build something better.
• One day, there will be something better and more important than even the iPad.
• Stay Foolish
• Don’t be afraid to make mistakes
• If you are on a mission to mark a dent in the world, you will meet many people in
your journey who will try to discourage you and make you feel foolish.
• I think he meant not to change your course and get influenced by such people.
Instead, stay foolish and move on to accomplish your mission.
Good Luck

More Related Content

DOCX
The real leadership lessons of steve jobs
PPTX
Steve jobs
PPTX
Steve jobs
PPTX
Steve jobs
KEY
The baseline is shifting
PDF
Blackberry: Looking for the iPod effect
PDF
Video Production Intensive
PPTX
Apple case study
The real leadership lessons of steve jobs
Steve jobs
Steve jobs
Steve jobs
The baseline is shifting
Blackberry: Looking for the iPod effect
Video Production Intensive
Apple case study

What's hot (20)

PPTX
DLYohn Steve Jobs on Brand-building
PPTX
Novare14 jan branding and funding 101_bpichman_final
KEY
PPTX
Tech in libraries
PPTX
How to Win (or Lose) a Hackathon
PPTX
Slideshare
PPT
Apple Brand Experience
PDF
Early Days of Eye-Fi
PDF
Making (Some?) Money as an Indie iOS Developer
PPTX
Computers In Libraries - Innovative Funding Alternatives
PDF
Lesson learned on product dev
PDF
Everything Old is New Again: The State of Web Design
PDF
Zero IdeaPitch Deck
PDF
Steve jobs innovator
PPTX
Preview Webinar of REALTOR on the Go
PPTX
How to Perfectly Brand your Next Unicorn Startup
PPT
Slideshare100710 101009171853-phpapp01
PPTX
Be like steve
PPTX
Steve Jobs Presentation Secrets
PPTX
Steve jobs was a product manager
DLYohn Steve Jobs on Brand-building
Novare14 jan branding and funding 101_bpichman_final
Tech in libraries
How to Win (or Lose) a Hackathon
Slideshare
Apple Brand Experience
Early Days of Eye-Fi
Making (Some?) Money as an Indie iOS Developer
Computers In Libraries - Innovative Funding Alternatives
Lesson learned on product dev
Everything Old is New Again: The State of Web Design
Zero IdeaPitch Deck
Steve jobs innovator
Preview Webinar of REALTOR on the Go
How to Perfectly Brand your Next Unicorn Startup
Slideshare100710 101009171853-phpapp01
Be like steve
Steve Jobs Presentation Secrets
Steve jobs was a product manager
Ad

Similar to Learning Technology Leadership from Steve Jobs (20)

DOCX
httpshbr.org201204the-real-leadership-lessons-of-steve-j.docx
PPTX
The real leadership_lessons_of_steve_jobs
PPT
Steve jobs leadership traits
PDF
High Performance Leadership lessons from movies and from world's top leaders ...
PDF
Innovate the steve_jobs_way
PDF
Innovate The Steve Jobs Way 7 Principles
PDF
Innovate the Steve Jobs Way
 
PDF
Innovate The Steve Jobs Way 7 Principles
PDF
Innovate the Steve Jobs Way
PDF
Innovate the-steve-jobs-way-7-principles
PDF
Innovate the Steve Jobs way; 7 principles
PDF
Steve jobs innovator
PPT
Entrepreneur steve jobs (2nd aug 2014)
PDF
Book review the steve jobs way by dinesh chandrasekar
PPTX
The alchemist steve jobs - a life story
PDF
7 Innovation Secrets Of Steve Jobs
PPTX
Steve Jobs An Eulogy
PDF
Steve jobs leadership
PPTX
Stevejobs
PPT
Innovation Secrets of Steve Jobs
httpshbr.org201204the-real-leadership-lessons-of-steve-j.docx
The real leadership_lessons_of_steve_jobs
Steve jobs leadership traits
High Performance Leadership lessons from movies and from world's top leaders ...
Innovate the steve_jobs_way
Innovate The Steve Jobs Way 7 Principles
Innovate the Steve Jobs Way
 
Innovate The Steve Jobs Way 7 Principles
Innovate the Steve Jobs Way
Innovate the-steve-jobs-way-7-principles
Innovate the Steve Jobs way; 7 principles
Steve jobs innovator
Entrepreneur steve jobs (2nd aug 2014)
Book review the steve jobs way by dinesh chandrasekar
The alchemist steve jobs - a life story
7 Innovation Secrets Of Steve Jobs
Steve Jobs An Eulogy
Steve jobs leadership
Stevejobs
Innovation Secrets of Steve Jobs
Ad

More from Dr. Syed Hassan Amin (12)

PDF
Greenplum versus redshift and actian vectorwise comparison
PPTX
Introduction To Docker
PPTX
Laravel Unit Testing
PDF
Multitier holistic Approach for urdu Nastaliq Recognition
PPT
Understandig PCA and LDA
PPT
Agile Scrum Methodology
PPTX
Thin Controllers Fat Models - How to Write Better Code
PPTX
Improving Code Quality Through Effective Review Process
PPTX
Software Project Management Tips and Tricks
PPTX
Improving Software Quality Using Object Oriented Design Principles
PPTX
Understanding and Managing Technical Debt
PPT
An OCR System for recognition of Urdu text in Nastaliq Font
Greenplum versus redshift and actian vectorwise comparison
Introduction To Docker
Laravel Unit Testing
Multitier holistic Approach for urdu Nastaliq Recognition
Understandig PCA and LDA
Agile Scrum Methodology
Thin Controllers Fat Models - How to Write Better Code
Improving Code Quality Through Effective Review Process
Software Project Management Tips and Tricks
Improving Software Quality Using Object Oriented Design Principles
Understanding and Managing Technical Debt
An OCR System for recognition of Urdu text in Nastaliq Font

Recently uploaded (20)

PPTX
BASIC H2S TRAINING for oil and gas industries
PDF
The Plan: Save the Palestinian Nation Now
PPTX
Strategic Plan 2023-2024 Presentation.pptx
PPTX
Course Overview of the Course Titled.pptx
PPTX
Chapter One an overview of political economy
PPTX
Course Overview of the Course Titled.pptx
PDF
Human resources management is a best management
PPTX
Self-Awareness and Values Development presentation
PDF
Contemporary management and it's content
PPTX
Five S Training Program - Principles of 5S
PDF
Leveraging Intangible Assets Through Campus Entrepreneurship and Tech Transfer
PDF
CISSP Domain 5: Identity and Access Management (IAM)
PPTX
Project Management Methods PERT-and-CPM.pptx
PDF
Case study -Uber strategic plan and management
PPT
Claims and Adjustment Business_Communication.pptx.ppt
PDF
The Sustainable Site: Boosting Productivity in Construction – Pipe Dream or P...
PDF
The Cyber SwarmShield by Stéphane Nappo
PDF
Timeless Leadership Principles from History’s Greatest Figures by Alfonso Ken...
PPTX
Human resources management -job perception concept
PDF
MANAGEMENT LESSONS FROM ANCIENT KNOWLEDGE SYSTEM-ARTHASHASTRA AND THIRUKKURAL...
BASIC H2S TRAINING for oil and gas industries
The Plan: Save the Palestinian Nation Now
Strategic Plan 2023-2024 Presentation.pptx
Course Overview of the Course Titled.pptx
Chapter One an overview of political economy
Course Overview of the Course Titled.pptx
Human resources management is a best management
Self-Awareness and Values Development presentation
Contemporary management and it's content
Five S Training Program - Principles of 5S
Leveraging Intangible Assets Through Campus Entrepreneurship and Tech Transfer
CISSP Domain 5: Identity and Access Management (IAM)
Project Management Methods PERT-and-CPM.pptx
Case study -Uber strategic plan and management
Claims and Adjustment Business_Communication.pptx.ppt
The Sustainable Site: Boosting Productivity in Construction – Pipe Dream or P...
The Cyber SwarmShield by Stéphane Nappo
Timeless Leadership Principles from History’s Greatest Figures by Alfonso Ken...
Human resources management -job perception concept
MANAGEMENT LESSONS FROM ANCIENT KNOWLEDGE SYSTEM-ARTHASHASTRA AND THIRUKKURAL...

Learning Technology Leadership from Steve Jobs

  • 1. Learning Technology Leadership from Steve Jobs By Dr. Syed Hassan Amin
  • 2. Cornerstones of Steve Jobs Leadership • Focus • Simplify • Responsibility to the End • When behind, leapfrog, innovate • Products before Profit • Customers don’t know what they want • Bend Reality • Impute • Push for perfection • Tolerate only “A” players • Engage face-to-face • Know both the big picture and the details • Stay Hungary, stay foolish
  • 3. “It doesn’t make sense to hire smart people and then tell them what to do; we hire smart people so they can tell us what to do.” - Steve Jobs
  • 4. Focus • When Jobs returned to Apple in 1997, it was producing a random array of computers and peripherals, including a dozen different versions of the Macintosh. • After a few weeks of product review sessions, he’d finally had enough. “Stop!” he shouted. “This is crazy.” • He grabbed a Magic Marker, padded in his bare feet to a whiteboard, and drew a two-by-two grid. “Here’s what we need,” he declared. • Atop the two columns, he wrote “Consumer” and “Pro.” • He labeled the two rows “Desktop” and “Portable.” Their job, he told his team members, was to focus on four great products, one for each quadrant.
  • 5. Simplicity • Jobs aimed for the simplicity that comes from conquering, rather than merely ignoring, complexity. • “Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication,” declared Apple’s first marketing brochure. • When designing GUI based computer, Jobs went to a local industrial design firm and told one of its founders, Dean Hovey, that he wanted a simple, single-button model that cost $15. • “To be truly simple, you have to go really deep”, Johny Ive
  • 6. Take Responsibilities to the End • Jobs knew that the best way to achieve simplicity was to make sure that hardware, software, and peripheral devices were seamlessly integrated. • An Apple ecosystem—an iPod connected to a Mac with iTunes software, for example—allowed devices to be simpler, syncing to be smoother, and glitches to be rarer. • The more complex tasks, such as making new playlists, could be done on the computer, allowing the iPod to have fewer functions and buttons.
  • 7. When Behind, Leap Frog • Original iMac was designed for managing a user’s photos and videos, but it was left behind when dealing with music. • People with PCs were downloading and swapping music and then ripping and burning their own CDs. • The iMac’s slot drive couldn’t burn CDs. • But instead of merely catching up by upgrading the iMac’s CD drive, he decided to create an integrated system that would transform the music industry. • The result was the combination of iTunes, the iTunes Store, and the iPod, which allowed users to buy, share, manage, store, and play music better than they could with any other devices. • One challenge to iPod was that mobile phone makers would start adding music players to their handsets. • Steve Jobs cannibalized iPod sales by creating the iPhone. “If we don’t cannibalize ourselves, someone else will,” he said.
  • 8. Put Products before Profit • Jobs theory about Decline of Great Companies : • They make some great products, but then the sales and marketing people take over the company, because they are the ones who can juice up profits. • When the sales guys run the company, the product guys don’t matter so much, and a lot of them just turn off. • It happened at Apple when Sculley came in, which was my fault, and it happened when Ballmer took over at Microsoft.
  • 9. Don’t be Slave to Focus Groups • When Jobs took his original Macintosh team on its first retreat, one member asked whether they should do some market research to see what customers wanted. • No,” Jobs replied, “because customers don’t know what they want until we’ve shown them.” • He invoked Henry Ford’s line “If I’d asked customers what they wanted, they would have told me, ‘A faster horse!’” • Jobs believed in intuition :“Intuition is a very powerful thing—more powerful than intellect, in my opinion.”
  • 10. Bend Reality • Jobs’s (in)famous ability to push people to do the impossible was dubbed by colleagues his Reality Distortion Field. • An early example was when Jobs was on the night shift at Atari and pushed Steve Wozniak to create a game called Breakout. • Woz said it would take months, but Jobs stared at him and insisted he could do it in four days. • Woz knew that was impossible, but he ended up doing it. • Jobs convinced Corning to manufacture gorilla glass in less than six months, although they claimed it can not be done !
  • 11. Push for Perfection • During the development of almost every product he ever created, Jobs at a certain point “hit the pause button” and went back to the drawing board because he felt it wasn’t perfect. • iPhone • The initial design had the glass screen set into an aluminum case. • One Monday morning Jobs went over to see Ive. “I didn’t sleep last night,” he said, “because I realized that I just don’t love it.” • Ive, to his dismay, instantly saw that Jobs was right. • iPad • At one point Jobs looked at the model and felt slightly dissatisfied. It didn’t seem casual and friendly enough to scoop up and whisk away. • They needed to signal that you could grab it with one hand, on impulse. They decided that the bottom edge should be slightly rounded, so that a user would feel comfortable just snatching it up rather than lifting it carefully. • That meant engineering had to design the necessary connection ports and buttons in a thin, simple lip that sloped away gently underneath. Jobs delayed the product until the change could be made.
  • 12. Tolerate only “A” Players • Steve Jobs was one of the toughest bosses who said :- • I’ve learned over the years that when you have really good people, you don’t have to baby them,” • By expecting them to do great things, you can get them to do great things. Ask any member of that Mac team. They will tell you it was worth the pain.” Most of them do. • It’s important to appreciate that Jobs’s rudeness and roughness were accompanied by an ability to be inspirational. • Jobs infused Apple employees with an abiding passion to create groundbreaking products and a belief that they could accomplish what seemed impossible.
  • 13. Engage Face to Face • Jobs was a strong believer in face-to-face meetings. • Creativity comes from spontaneous meetings, from random discussions.
  • 14. Know both the Big Picture and Details • Time Warner CEO Jeff Bewkes says that one of Jobs’s salient traits was his ability and desire to envision overarching strategy while also focusing on the tiniest aspects of design. • For example, in 2000 he came up with the grand vision that the personal computer should become a “digital hub” for managing all of a user’s music, videos, photos, and content, and thus got Apple into the personal-device business with the iPod and then the iPad. • In 2010 he came up with the successor strategy—the “hub” would move to the cloud—and Apple began building a huge server farm so that all a user’s content could be uploaded and then seamlessly synced to other personal devices. • But even as he was laying out these grand visions, he was fretting over the shape and color of the screws inside the iMac.
  • 15. Stay Hungry, Stay Foolish • Stay Hungry • Be ambitious ! • Have a want, or need to feel like what you have right now isn't enough. • You can always build something better. • One day, there will be something better and more important than even the iPad. • Stay Foolish • Don’t be afraid to make mistakes • If you are on a mission to mark a dent in the world, you will meet many people in your journey who will try to discourage you and make you feel foolish. • I think he meant not to change your course and get influenced by such people. Instead, stay foolish and move on to accomplish your mission.