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Inside Steve's Brain

cgjherr writes "There are management insights to be learned from Steve Jobs? You're nuts. The only things you can learn from Jobs is how to drive people nuts. Or at least, that's what I thought up until I read 'Inside Steve's Brain.' Turns out, there are things to learn from Steve's obsessive perfectionism. Certainly I wouldn't copy every aspect of Jobs' management style. Doing that will likely get you fired, or at least reprimanded, in most companies. But there is some stuff to be learned from how Jobs designs products and analyses the market, and that's the view that Leander Kahney gives us access to." Keep reading for the rest of Jack's review. Inside Steve's Brain author Leander Kahney pages 304 publisher Portfolio rating 10 reviewer Jack Herrington ISBN 1591841984 summary A look inside Steve Jobs' management style at Apple and Pixar Chapter one covers in some detail Jobs and his relationship with Apple, both before he left and after he came back. He talks about exactly what steps Steve took to revive the company and restore the morale of the employees. As with all of the chapters it ends with a summary of what Leander thinks are the takeaways from each of the anecdotes.

Chapters two and three; Despotism and Perfectionism, talk about the two traits that most often associated with Steve. In Despotism Leander offers some stories about just how in control Steve is of every aspect of development at Apple. And Perfectionism, well, that's self explanatory. Though you'll probably find some things you don't know about exactly where Jobs gets his design and style influences.

Chapter four and five, Elitism and Passion, dig into how Jobs cultivates that magical Apple touch. He works his people inside the company and inculcates a sense of pride and perfectionism in the Apple brand. And he works the customer base through innovative advertising that promotes the ideals and the brand, even when the product was inferior when he first took over. In the short Passion chapter Leander talks about how he builds a wider sense of world changing responsibility in the company and through his products.

The sixth chapter, Inventive Spirit, cite several examples of how Jobs used his relentless management style to refine products, and most interestingly the Apple Store. He went so far as to develop a prototype store in warehouse at the edge of the Apple campus, and how he was willing to completely scrap the design of the store when it wasn't exactly right, costing him months of time.

The seventh chapter provides a complete case study on the development of the iPod and Jobs' role in that effort. It's intriguing to see how, while there had been MP3 players in the market already, Steve and his team were able to stand back and look at the larger picture of the iPod in it's complete product ecology.

The final chapter, the Whole Widget, covers what I think is the most important lesson to be learned from Apple; that they take care of the entire product cycle. Where other vendors take care of just one piece, the hardware, the software, the network, Apple takes care of everything. If there is a problem with an Apple product you take it to the Apple store and they fix it.

Leander Kahney is the same guy who wrote "The Cult of Mac" and "The Cult of iPod". He knows his way around Apple. He has a clear grasp of the history of Apple in the large and the evolution of their key products. His insights prove that he also has good working relationship with some of the people on the ground in Apple.

There are certainly some interesting anecdotes about Steve in this book. But it would be a mistake to look at the book as just some psychoanalysis of one man. Steve doesn't make all of the products himself. The developer and designers at Apple do. It's the culture of the company that Jobs' controls, but the people who work there are motivated by it and produce within it. What you really learn here is just how passionate these folks are about finely tuning everything about their products, their services, the whole deal. It's inspiring.

You can purchase Inside Steve's Brain from amazon.com. Slashdot welcomes readers' book reviews -- to see your own review here, read the book review guidelines, then visit the submission page.

4 of 292 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Tons of Gems from Steve! by imipak · · Score: 0, Troll

    This is pure flame by the way, I won't feel bad about being mod'd to oblivion here ;)

    "...world changing responsibility..."

    Pardon a stupid question, but exactly how does selling a shitload of computers, mp3 players and now some cellphones discharge a responsibility to change the world? The only responsibility it's discharged is to make Apple stockholders a good return on their investment, and a few old white men very rich. Woohoo, all power to the soviets, long live the revolution... christ, I feel sick. Fuck Jobs, fuck Apple, and fuck every one of you who buy his "lickable" products. All you're licking is Jobs' turtleneck.

  2. Re:Jobs role in Apple is overrated by 4D6963 · · Score: 0, Troll

    Wow internet in 1984, I thought internet was only for Big Brother back then.....I guess George Orwell forgot to mention "Internet & Slashdot" in his story!!! :D

    Huh.. You know 1984 wasn't just a novel, it was also a year. If I recall correctly it took place about 24 years ago and lasted for about 366 days. Look it up!

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    You just got troll'd!
  3. Re:It only works in the top slot by linhares · · Score: 0, Troll
    Buddy, you've got an MBA? Congratulations! How about learning to spell now?

    First Phase: did you mean wholeheartedly?

    Second Phrase: YOU'RE either good or YOU'RE dead

    Third Phrase: asshole; "make projects perform fiscally"? Isn't financially a little bit better?

    Fourth Phrase: Rome wasn't built BY polite MBA's who took THEIR teams on ropes courses on a weekly basis (.) it was built by unyielding eccentric assholes who made you think if you screwed up they would have your head.

    And now to the finish line: I'm sure many of my own subordinates have plotted MY demise but I usually pose it to them as follows. I can bring you donuts and call you buddy, or I can whip you into an outstanding worker. Which do you think will look better on you rresume? (rresume rhymes with costume, résumé is how it's spelled by non-MBAs)

    There. FIFY.

    Boy, are your subordinates glad you're such a perfectionist!!

  4. Re:Steve is impressive by tehcyder · · Score: 0, Troll

    Yeah, I know a packaging engineer, and she loves Apple's stuff. Apple apparently wins packaging awards regularly.

    Great job title.

    And my postman's a customer-focussed peripatetic supply-chain-enablement engineer. He wins "postie of the month" awards quite frequently.

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    To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it