Both of the Steve Jobs biographies I read, Steve Jobs by Walter Isaacson and Becoming Steve Jobs: The Evolution of a Reckless Upstart into a Visionary Leader by Brent Schlender and Rick Tetzeli, were written by people who knew Steve Jobs personally. But there are a couple of small points that I think they overlooked….
Steps to becoming a successful entrepreneur – what can be learned from Steve Jobs, Part 6/7
This post may contain text and image affiliate links. You pay the same price, but I may receive a small commissions for purchases through those links.I’ve read quite a bit of information about becoming an entrepreneur. Not that I’ve been able to put much of it into practice, but I’ve done a lot of research. Enough that while I was reading Steve Jobs by Walter Isaacson, and Becoming Steve Jobs: The Evolution of a Reckless Upstart into a Visionary Leader by Brent Schlender and Rick Tetzeli, I was surprised to notice when Jobs’ success occurred not because he followed what is often given as common advice, but when he deviated from it….
Steve Jobs’ weaknesses as a leader – Part 5/7
This post may contain text and image affiliate links. You pay the same price, but I may receive a small commissions for purchases through those links.Becoming Steve Jobs: The Evolution of a Reckless Upstart into a Visionary Leader by Brent Schlender and Rick Tetzeli points out that Job’s success in his second career at Apple depended not only on what he learned from the failures of NeXT and the successes of Pixar, but on him evolving personally, learning how to manage his weaknesses and fine tune his strengths. I went over some of his strengths in a previous post. So what were his characteristics that hampered him, especially earlier in his career? What were Steve Jobs’ weaknesses as a leader?…
Characteristics of Steve Jobs that made him successful – Part 4/7
This post may contain text and image affiliate links. You pay the same price, but I may receive a small commissions for purchases through those links.According to Becoming Steve Jobs: The Evolution of a Reckless Upstart into a Visionary Leader by Brent Schlender and Rick Tetzeli, these were some characteristics of Steve Jobs that made him successful. I also read, Steve Jobs by Walter Isaacson, the official biography, but because Becoming Steve focused more on his career and less on his personal life, it was easier to keep track of his characteristics in Becoming Steve. Some of these were characteristics that he was lacking – or weren’t well developed – the first time he was at Apple and led, all or in part, to his dismissal from the company. Some of these characteristics intersect with the ones that I went over before, the characteristics of Steve Jobs that are the opposite of what traditional education teaches.…
Entrepreneur skills Steve Jobs didn’t learn in school – Part 3/7
This post may contain text and image affiliate links. You pay the same price, but I may receive a small commissions for purchases through those links.How did Steve Jobs, a college dropout, go on to found a computer company, get kicked out, help steer the success of Pixar, and make his way back to Apple and phenomenal success? Since he was a college dropout, it wasn’t from something he learned in college. In fact, he wasn’t much of a student in high school either. His opinion was that schools just made students memorize stuff, rather than teaching them interesting information. What were the entrepreneur skills Steve Jobs didn’t learn in school?…
Steve Jobs and the history of computers – Part 2/7
This post may contain text and image affiliate links. You pay the same price, but I may receive a small commissions for purchases through those links.Becoming Steve Jobs vs. Steve Jobs the official biography, a comparison Part 1/7
This post may contain text and image affiliate links. You pay the same price, but I may receive a small commissions for purchases through those links.What skills are necessary to have a successful career? Time and time again I’ve read that the jobs of the future are jobs that don’t even exist; that today’s students will have to be tomorrow’s entrepreneurs. My reading of World Class Learners and Outliers led me to be curious to learn more about the career of Steve Jobs. So I followed those two books by reading Steve Jobs by Walter Isaacson, the official biography. Some months later this was the choice for my book club. Instead of rereading Steve Jobs, I decided to gain an alternate perspective by reading Becoming Steve Jobs: The Evolution of a Reckless Upstart into a Visionary Leader by Brent Schlender and Rick Tetzeli. Following is a comparison of the two books, Becoming Steve Jobs vs. Steve Jobs the official biography….
5 characteristics for success you can learn from chess
This post may contain text and image affiliate links. You pay the same price, but I may receive a small commissions for purchases through those links.In How Children Succeed, Paul Tough talks a lot about chess, a full quarter of the book, in fact. But while his stories about chess were interesting, Tough didn’t convince me that teaching kids chess teaches them motivation. But I was able to pick out 5 characteristics for success that chess might be able to teach, that are good lessons in general when trying to reach success….
Outliers Book Review – Obsession to success, Part 4/4
This post may contain text and image affiliate links. You pay the same price, but I may receive a small commissions for purchases through those links.My dissatisfaction with the current overbearing schedule for students in high school, has led me to do quite a bit of reading. (To see my reading list for books about success and education, click here.) One of the first books I read was Outliers: The Story of Success, by Malcom Gladwell.
In the first half, Gladwell showed how the success of Outliers can be tied to luck, to timing, to “Opportunity.”
In the second half, Gladwell showed how the success of Outliers is also affected by where you come from and your culture, “Legacy.”
In my third post, I looked at my own conclusions from Outliers about what you needed to do to be successful. Hint: It has nothing to do with being a straight-A student.)
But the book is about what makes people an outlying success, like Steve Jobs. What factors does Gladwell think it takes to be an outlying success? Obsession….
Outliers Book Review – What you need for success, Part 3/4
This post may contain text and image affiliate links. You pay the same price, but I may receive a small commissions for purchases through those links.My dissatisfaction with the current overbearing schedule for students in high school, has led me to do quite a bit of reading. (To see my reading list for books about success and education, click here.) One of the first books I read was Outliers: The Story of Success, by Malcom Gladwell.
In the first half, Gladwell showed how the success of Outliers can be tied to luck, to timing, to “Opportunity.”
In the second half, Gladwell showed how the success of Outliers is also affected by where you come from and your culture, “Legacy.”
There’s nothing like taking the evidence presented to you and thinking that you can come up with a better explanation, even though you’re getting all the information from a secondary source. 🙂 (In other words, I didn’t get to see all the evidence Galdwell collected, just what he presented to me in this book.) But I think all the information can point to a different, more hopeful, and more active interpretation.
What you need for success – my take on Outliers, by Gladwell
…