Posts Tagged ‘Apple Inc.’

Thoughts on Leadership: What would Steve do?

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A few weeks ago Time Magazine featured an article by Rana Foroohar about Steve Jobs and his lessons in leadership.  Usually, in American business, leadership is defined by the bean counters focused on running a super efficient business. Jobs, on the other hand, put engineers above all in the corporate hierarchy.  He focused on the products, not the profits, for motivation.

I found the whole article of interest and thought I’d share it with you here, today:

Technology has been a consistent bright spot in the U.S. economy over the past few years, and no company has epitomized that better than Apple.  Perhaps that’s why business schools and leaderships coaches have been talking in recent months about what management lessons should be taken from Walter Isaacson’s biography of Steve Jobs, which provided an anthropological look at the habits of the most famous CEO since GE’s “Neutron Jack” Welch.  In it, Jobs is revealed as both an autocratic bully and a business genius who executed the most successful corporate turnaround so far this century.

Perhaps the book should be required reading for future MBAs, since the management arts associated with Jobs’ story aren’t what you might think. “Business schools often ask me what Steve Jobs teaches us about leadership,” says Isaacson.  “It’s not that he parked in the handicapped spot or that he was nasty to people.  It’s that he took total responsibility for his products from end to end, that he put products above return on investment and that he wasn’t a slave to focus groups.”

Those are lessons that American business, which has for decades focused more on the bottom line than on real innovation, should heed.  While there are plenty of people in Silicon Valley who envy Jobs’ cult of personality, experts like Mike Useem, head of the leadership center at Wharton, say he probably succeeded in spite of it: “Jobs built a good team, but he would have gotten even better people if he’d been less tough on them.”  Yes, research shows there are plenty of narcissists in the corner office, but it also finds they tend to be bad managers.  In fact, to the extent they succeed, it’s usually because of other qualities, like long-term vision and relentless execution.

Jobs had both, but more important, he had the entrepreneurial impulse to put engineers above bean counters in the corporate hierarchy. As Jobs told Isaacson, “My passion has been to build an enduring company where people were motivated to make great products.  Everything else was secondary.  Sure, it was great to make a profit, because that was what allowed you to make great products.  But the products, not the profits, were the motivation.  It’s a subtle difference, but it ends up meaning everything.  The people you hire, who get’s promoted, what you discuss in meetings.”

Focusing on product meant taking the long view – another key Jobs leadership lesson.  After the dotcom bubble burst in 2000, most of Silicon Valley stopped spending.  Apple, meanwhile, started ramping up research and development, hoping to invent a lot of innovative new products that would put it ahead of competitors after the downturn.

It worked.  Out of the recession came the iPod, the iTunes store, Apple stores and even a new operating system, OS X.  “Steve spent a lot of time stressing to me how the seeds planted during that downturn, sometimes over the skepticism of his board and investors, grew into the products that turned Apple into the world’s most valuable company,” says Isaacson.  Jobs didn’t worry, he says, about explaining to the Street “why building a bunch of glass shrines with only 12 products in them was a good return on investment.”  He probably also would have shrugged off questions about the company’s business practices in China, as he had in the past.

The truth is that investing during a downturn is almost always good business.  Samsung trumped Sony in the 1990s by investing more in R&D; China’s solar industry has leaped ahead of competitors by piling on investment since the financial crisis.  In the U.S., there is still $2 trillion worth of cash sitting on corporate balance sheets.  And there are too few CEOs willing to make the same kind of bold investment choices Jobs did.

That’s the dilemma facing business schools today.  Jobs stands out as an exceptional leader not so much because of his in-your-face style but because American business has come to be dominated by bean counters seeking hyper-efficiency rather than by innovators focused on real growth.  And that, more than anything else, is why schools like Harvard, Wharton and Stanford are distilling what Jobs had to teach business.  “We’ve largely tapped out efficiency gains in corporate America,” says Nitin Nohria, dean of Harvard Business School, which is shifting its curriculum to focus more on Apple-like product-driven innovation and less on financial engineering. “We need business leaders who can help answer the big questions of the day – how technology can help us create jobs and what role business should play in society.”  While the Apple founder probably wouldn’t have had much to say about the latter, it’s hard to think of a better poster child for the former.


Thursday Thoughts: Crises and the Practice of Leadership

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“People with passion find a way to get things done and to make things happen, in spite of the obstacles and challenges that get in the way.”  
                                                                                                                 -Steve Jobs

After you spend some time leading a company or team, you inevitably encounter a crisis. How you deal with that crisis as a leader ends up mattering more than the crisis itself.

On June 24, the consumer technology industry’s darling, Apple Inc., found itself wrapped up in a publicity nightmare. Many of the consumers who’d bought the latest iPhone 4 were reporting reception issues, and evidence showed that a defective antennae was causing dropped calls and poor connections when held a certain way.

The issues were more than a big deal partly because of all the fanfare leading up to the iPhone 4 release. When the long-anticipated iPhone 4 was announced in early June, Apple said it was the biggest leap they had taken with the product since the original iPhone shipped three years ago. The company sold more than 3 million iPhone 4s in the first 22 days on the market.

The negative press regarding the defective antennae continued to pile on, causing Apple CEO Steve Jobs to abruptly end his Hawaii vacation to address the issue in a rush press conference.

Apple handled some things inadequately during this calamity, but eventually ended up doing the right thing. Here are five leadership qualities Steve Jobs used to get through this crisis that we can all learn from:

  • Strive to educate. In his press conference, Jobs focused more on the larger issues of the smartphones rather than the signal deprivation. He wanted to combine his learning with action and impel the public to seek greater understanding of the product.
  • Maintain constant communication. As this whole debacle transpired, Jobs’ main goal was to show that communication is the real work of leadership.
  • Become a problem solver. Apple did not choose to simply forget about this issue and not deal with it. Instead, company officials dealt with the situation head on and extended support to their customers.
  • Don’t be afraid to show your vulnerability. Jobs began his press conference by admitting the company is not perfect. In doing this and explaining that Apple does have faults, he showed he was strong enough to care.
  • An apology is a powerful way to make things better. At one point, Jobs offered a pure apology. His forgiveness does not change the past, but it will enlarge the future.

The clear lesson here is that it is only in the practice of leadership that we influence our world. Rather than view the iPhone 4 problems as a setback, Jobs saw it as a healthy, inevitable part of becoming a successful company.

As American football coach Lou Holtz once said, “Ability is what you’re capable of doing. Motivation determines what you do. Attitude determines how well you do it.”

Steve Jobs exemplified just that. Without his passion and leadership to get through the crisis, the public would not have believed in his ability to resolve the iPhone 4 antennae situation.

As you think about your career and obstacles you face, remember that Steve Jobs believes, “Passion rules! Passion is about our emotional energy and a love for what we do. Without passion it becomes difficult to fight back in the face of obstacles and difficulties.”

The next time you face a crisis, let your passion kick in and guide your leadership decisions.