Remembering Steve Jobs...
Rohantha Athukorala
After a tiring twenty hour flight the day before, I woke up at the
Plaza in New York around 8 am, knowing that making it to the 8.30
inauguration of the Global CEO Forum was going to be a challenge.
Steve Jobs was fiercely a private person but communicated with
the world with the brands he built around a consumer |
Anyway, in my seat by 8.40, I was quite embarrassed as there were
only 75 to 100 people in the room with CEO of Macy’s at the helm sharing
his insights on how Madonna had injected new blood to the store with the
‘Material Girl’ collection even though she was way above the age of
being a girl.
I guess that’s the beauty of the spirit of America and why it is yet
considered a great nation to the world. It was followed up with a
performance by Madonna herself with her 14 year old daughter that surely
gave the punch that was required to me.
At the breakout, I was eager to chat up with Mark Zukerberg of FB as
this brand is very dear to me and I was also going to be at Harvard
later on in the very corridors that FB was created.
Picking the circle that Mark Z was in, I got myself introduced by my
colleague in the UN in New York. The others in the circle were Dick
Castello of Twitter, eBay CEO John Danahoe, Tommy Hilfiger and another
gent who looked frail but very charismatic. He was wearing a black tunic
neck top and a denim jean who did not have as much as traffic as the
others so I thought of moving to him keep the networking alive.
His name was Steve Jobs. I had heard of him but given that I am not
an IT guy the name did not ring a strong bell and we started talking.
He knew about Sri Lanka due to the tsunami and the discussion centred
around this. He had a charismatic persona especially in the way he
quietly asked his question but as always, great minds ask sharp
questions and he shot at me ‘What was the biggest issue that the
Tsunami’ brought about for your country? to which I honestly was not
ready to answer. But his brilliance was such that he kept speaking
giving me time to think and I replied ‘the money that poured into the
country resulted in high wages of the construction industry workers that
today we are paying the price especially in the post war infrastructure
boom’.
Rohantha Atukorale |
He nodded and said it was the same in the valley(he must have been
referring to the Silicone Valley) in the dot com era and now the US uses
the resources in places like India.
The sessions began and we had to move on then.
Today when I look at the media, be it You Tube, Facebook or the
newspapers what I see is the genius of this man and it forced me
understand the works of this legend that we never actually recognized
until he died. I suppose the slogan that says until you die you do not
belong to the world holds ground. Let me share six key thoughts I picked
up.
Money
It is very clear that Steve Jobs focus was not money. Though he was
the CEO of the most valuable brands in the world from 1997, his salary
has been $1.
Though he is ranked the 110th richest person in the world with
fortune of $8.5 billion if he had not sold his Apple stock in 1985, he
would have been the fifth richest individual in the world.
His passion was to innovate to the world what is required for
tomorrow. In effect he was a servant to the world and the world paid
tribute to him when he died.
Better
His ethos of life was to surround yourself with people, better than
yourself. So he recruited the best in the industry for Apple in the
likes of John Ive, Peter Oppenheimer, Tim Cook to name a few, knowing
that he was going to fade away soon.
He supported the team by launching the I Phone 4S the day before he
died so that with the record breaking sales that happened, it gave
confidence to the investors which once again demonstrated his visionary
thinking.
Select life
Steve Jobs the man he is, spent the last week of his life just like
he did in years back. Jobs had invited his close friends like Dean
Ornish for his favourite Sushi meal and also spent time with his board
member of Apple Bill Campbell, Disney CEO Robin Iger.
Then he took time off to talk to the key decision-makers about the
launch of the I Phone 4S.
Very politely declined any outside engagements and spent more the
rest of his time with his family. Which ones again tells us the real
purpose of life that manifests only in the time of trials.
Easy and simple
A key take on his great works to me was how he understood the
youngster of tomorrow and how he made their life easy. Be is the
original Mac Or the I Pod, I Tunes, I Pad.
He beautifully married the science with the art of life that left a
Steve Jobs signature on every consumer he touched. I guess this is the
mark of a true genius.
Love
Though Steve Jobs was fired in 1985 from Apple his love for the
company continued even though he thought of leaving the Silicone Valley
due to the public spat. When he decided to return in 1997 as interim CEO
the company was virtually bankrupt. But with some smart moves internally
he grounded the company and launched innovative products of the future
that once again made Apple one of the most valuable brands in 2011.
Which indicates the power that gets unleashed if one is passionate in
one’s job.
Own terms
What was amazing about this man to me is that he lived a life on his
own terms. He lived in brick house in residential neighbourhood and not
in a mansion away from reality. The only reason he asked Isaacson to
write a biography was to enable his children to know what he did and why
he did it and not for the world.
I suppose it’s strange but the world appreciates the greatness of
people only once they have left the world. But the truth is that when
one is alive you belong to a family, organization and a country but only
after you die you belong to the world. |