The Evolution of Steve Jobs: From a Dreamer to a Dictator
Daniel Kottke, who traveled to India with Jobs, was his college friend and one of the first employees of Apple, shares his view on the transformation of Steve Jobs.
He wasn't like that when we were traveling in India. He was fine. I never had a problem with him. Never.
Daniel Kottke, who traveled to India with Jobs, was his college friend and one of the first employees of Apple, shares his view on the transformation of Steve Jobs.
He wasn't like that when we were traveling in India. He was fine. I never had a problem with him. Never.
How do you explain the change in him then?
Because running a company is very
complicated and Steve
was quite young when Apple started - he
was 21 years old. He had no experience. the computer industry was dominated by much older people, with much more experience. And he was
competing against them. And so Steve was under
a lot of pressure to stay on top of his
own company. You have to be a little bit
ruthless to stay on top.
Steve had a
very large amount of influence at Apple
because he owned more shares than anyone
else. So that's what helped him become a
little dictator, if you want to use that
word. I used the word "dictator" in a good
sense. When you're a dictator you can get
things done and not having to ask the
permission of a committee. He
was impatient to be successful. Impatient
to make a change in the world.
Why Steve Jobs visited India - read here, how this trip inspired Jobs to build Apple - read here, why Apple is called Apple - read here , what it was like to work with Jobs - read here, and what do Steve Jobs and Elon Musk have in common - read here
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