Looks to the example of Apple's Steve Jobs in determining how business leaders should act in today's professional world. Reprint.
In this book the author gives the reader the opportunity of seeing Steve Jobs as only his closest associates have ever seen him, and to learn what has made him, and the mystique of his management style, capable of creating tools so ...
Lead and Succeed Like the World’s Greatest Business Innovator There’s no accounting for Steve Jobs’s mind.
Draws on more than forty interviews with Steve Jobs, as well as interviews with family members, friends, competitors, and colleagues to offer a look at the co-founder and leading creative force behind the Apple computer company.
iCon takes a look at the most astounding figure in a business era noted for its mavericks, oddballs, and iconoclasts. Drawing on a wide range of sources, Jeffrey Young and...
" In the tradition of Thank You for Smoking and in the spirit of The Onion, Options is a novelistic sendup and takedown of Silicon Valley, Hollywood, and Washington, D.C., as viewed by a central character who exists, to his immense self ...
2. Walter Isaccson, Steve Jobs (Simon & Schuster, New York, 2011), p. 512 3. Ben Dobbin, “Kodak Engineer Had Revolutionary Idea: The First Digital Camera,” September 8, 2005. Chapter 8 More on Product Strategy Design Is How It Learning ...
For anyone trying to turn a company into the next Atari or Apple, build a more creative workforce, or fashion a career in a changing world, this book will enlighten, challenge, surprise, and amuse.
No matter whether you are a novice presenter or a professional speaker like me, you will read and reread this book with the same enthusiasm that people bring to their iPods." —David Meerman Scott, bestselling author of The New Rules of ...
These are the simple, meaningful, and attainable principles that drive us all to "Think Different." These are The Innovation Secrets of Steve Jobs.
MBA at Stanford, Johnson chose to start his career unloading trucks for the Mervyn's department store. He then moved up the ranks at Target before making his mark by commissioning the architect Michael Graves to design a teapot ...