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Again, you can’t connect the dots looking forward; you can only connect them looking backwards. So you have to trust that the dots will somehow connect in your future. You have to trust in something - your gut, destiny, life, karma, whatever.
Steve Jobs
    • #Apple
    • #Steve Jobs
  • 1 year ago
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Can you be the next Steve Jobs ?

Paul Graham is the founder of Y Combinator, and a man responsible for building many silicon valley start-ups into successful companies. In his recently titled blog post, “Frighteningly Ambitious Start-Up Ideas” Paul gives seven ideas where next generation entrepreneurs can start looking.

But it is this paragraph on Steve Jobs that made me go Wow. Yes this is what Lynchpins should do.

Writes Paul :

“ 5. The Next Steve Jobs


I was talking recently to someone who knew Apple well, and I asked him if the people now running the company would be able to keep creating new things the way Apple had under Steve Jobs. His answer was simply “no.” I already feared that would be the answer. I asked more to see how he’d qualify it. But he didn’t qualify it at all. No, there will be no more great new stuff beyond whatever’s currently in the pipeline. Apple’s revenues may continue to rise for a long time, but as Microsoft shows, revenue is a lagging indicator in the technology business.

So if Apple’s not going to make the next iPad, who is? None of the existing players. None of them are run by product visionaries, and empirically you can’t seem to get those by hiring them. Empirically the way you get a product visionary as CEO is for him to found the company and not get fired. So the company that creates the next wave of hardware is probably going to have to be a startup.

I realize it sounds preposterously ambitious for a startup to try to become as big as Apple. But no more ambitious than it was for Apple to become as big as Apple, and they did it. Plus a startup taking on this problem now has an advantage the original Apple didn’t: the example of Apple. Steve Jobs has shown us what’s possible. That helps would-be successors both directly, as Roger Bannister did, by showing how much better you can do than people did before, and indirectly, as Augustus did, by lodging the idea in users’ minds that a single person could unroll the future for them.[3]

Now Steve is gone there’s a vacuum we can all feel. If a new company led boldly into the future of hardware, users would follow. The CEO of that company, the “next Steve Jobs,” might not measure up to Steve Jobs. But he wouldn’t have to. He’d just have to do a better job than Samsung and HP and Nokia, and that seems pretty doable.”

Yes. Yes. Yes and Yes.

    • #Y Combinator
    • #Paul Graham
    • #Start-Ups
    • #Tech
    • #Steve Jobs
    • #lynchpin
  • 1 year ago
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