Steve Jobs - The Silicon Valley Pioneer
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Case Details:
Case Code : LDEN018
Case Length : 16 Pages
Period : 1976-2001
Pub Date : 2002
Teaching Note :Not Available Organization : Apple Computers
Industry : Computers
Countries : USA
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"You have probably had somebody punch you in the
stomach and it knocks the wind out of you and you cannot breathe. The harder you
try to breathe, the more you cannot breathe. And you know that the only thing
you can do is just relax so you can start breathing again."
- Steve Jobs, after he was ousted from Apple Computer, in
1985.
"I am convinced that about half of what separates the
successful entrepreneurs from the non-successful ones is pure perseverance."
- Steve Jobs, in 1995.
A Charismatic Leader
In September 1997, Steve Jobs (Steve) was appointed the 'interim CEO' of leading
information technology (IT) company, Apple Computers (Apple), by the Apple
board. Considering the fact that the company's board itself had ousted Steve in
a coup in 1983, this development was watched with interest by media and industry
observers. Steve's comeback was being seen as Apple's desperate attempt to
survive one of its worst phases: losses for 1997 amounted to $ 1.6 billion
(refer Exhibit I for financial statistics). The company reportedly needed a
charismatic leader who could steer it back to profitability and revive its
fortunes. Those who had followed Steve's career graph over the decades were not
too surprised at these developments.
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Known as the 'wonderkid' of the Silicon
Valley, Steve was known for pulling off seemingly impossible feats. He was
one of the few entrepreneurs who were reported to be 'as famous as a 1970s
rock star'. All through the late-1970's, Apple was always in the news.
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During that period, the Wall Street Journal focused on Steve/Apple
and did not cover entrepreneurial ventures like Intel even though its
cofounder, Bob Noyce, was the inventor of the silicon chip, which was at
that time a revolutionary product.
Steve gave the world its first personal computer (PC), 'Apple' and
reinvented the PC years later by creating the 'Macintosh'. He made a
successful business out of creating PCs that were not only user friendly
but were also aesthetically pleasing, unlike the 'dull' models available
those days. Steve's research on the Macintosh resulted in the creation
of the windows interface and the mouse technology, which went on to
become standards in the software industry. |
Steve Jobs - The Silicon Valley Pioneer
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