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Stop Trying to Get Married On The First Date (How to Recruit Talent)

January 19, 2018 by David

Almost by definition, every client I work with has plenty of experience finding employees, interviewing them, and hiring them.

A few might even have experience firing them, but not often (and that’s a topic for a different day). So they’ve got the minimum qualifications to recruit, right?

Um, well, not usually.

The “great” companies, whether they are publicly traded monoliths like Google, Intel, and Microsoft or tiny, svelt startups with halo venture capital backing, all share a common trait: the best talent wants to work there, and it is quite difficult to even get an interview at one of these companies, let alone a job. How did they get that way?

I counsel my clients recruiting talent to aim for this lofty goal: so many great candidates that you’re turning them away, picking and choosing among the talent pool to craft just the right mix of team members.

Very few entrepreneurial teams enjoy that kind of recruiting pool. But they can…

There are many components to creating a great team — company mission, leadership, awesome funding, great colleagues from the first day of company life, effective value system, and commercial success. There is nothing like the unmistakable smell of success. That brings in the stars.

But obviously a startup doesn’t have commercial success. And all will need to recruit before first revenue, let alone, profitability. But every other characteristic is achievable, even for a startup. How?

This is Sales

The first step is to confront in the reality of recruiting… is that this is just another form of sales.

And if you’ve been following along so far, you know that my definition of sales is “the effective influence of other people to do what you want, resulting in both you and them being quite happy with the outcome.”

We’re not trying to manipulate people here, and we’re certainly not seeking to get people to perform unnatural acts. But we are attempting to connect A with B, where both are happy.

And influencing people means work, and that means there needs to be a method.

More on the method in a moment — first, let’s also review another maxim: youhave to do it. The founders are best served if they themselves do the recruiting, and do it for months, if not years into the future.

Interview any successful founder, and they will recount their successes in terms of their team members. They’ll also recount that their biggest regrets are in the employees they either didn’t recruit (because they stepped away from the method) or they didn’t recruit effectively.

But Its Not Just For Founders

If you’re not the founder, there is still reason to develop recruiting skills.

The CEO that follows the founder; the second-in-command who helps lead the organization (e.g. COO, CFO, et al.) and even the department head (e.g. VP Engineering, Director of Marketing, et al.) will enjoy their job more, and experience a more successful career, if they are excellent in recruiting.

Companies are teams of people, and in most businesses and industries, the team is the key asset.

Heck, this is true in government agencies, academia, and in non-profits.

And I’ll go one step further, whether your growth has slowed, or you are doubling in size every year, you will be happier as a leader if you have a surplus of talent available in your pool of potential employees.

Always Be Recruiting

In other words, you should always be recruiting, even when you don’t currently have an opening. Whether or not you have an open position to fill today is a detail; the key is to have a talent pool.

Look around at the leaders in business and in non-profit organizations that you admire; notice that there are always talented staff that have worked with her before? They’re always recruiting.

The Method

There are just a five simple steps to my recruiting method:

#1 Write the job description. The usual classic way; I won’t belabor the point. But here is one difference: be sure to cover what you’ll accept as truly the absolute minimum qualification, so that it’s clear where the entry point is — don’t rely on a laundry list of desirable “nice to have” attributes.

At the same time, describe what you’d like “in the ideal candidate”, and don’t be afraid to dream big.

#2 Verify the job description with your team, and especially the leadership of the team. Listen carefully to their feedback, and be prepared to discuss this job in the context of other positions, both proposed and existing.

Often the discussion of the description surfaces previously latent questions about who does what; many organizations are evolving so quickly that the written descriptions haven’t kept up with reality. This is good, a sign of growth. But…

You don’t think you have enough time for this formality? Beware — in my experience the only other alternative is that the disagreement or misunderstanding about what the candidate will actually be doing… comes out during the interview process, in front of the candidate!

At best this is distracting, and at worst it can create fear, or even disgust from the candidate’s perspective. You want great candidates, they’ll sniff this out in a second. You’ve probably experienced this yourself.

In a fast-moving, high-growth organization, you might be surprised how often this happens. It is a real turn-off for the very best candidates, so get it right before they arrive.

#3 Write an advertisement, to attract candidates — and don’t publish that job description. Make it like the personals ads that ran in weekly newspapers in the 80s. While this art form has now largely atrophied, the point was to use the fewest amount of words to attract the maximum amount of candidates for a romantic date (papers charged by the word).

This generally goes better if you set aside the job description you honed in Step #2 and start with a blank piece of paper.

What is a personals ad? It has a hook or two to attract a potential date, and it describes just a bit of yourself — but the best ones keep this very brief. And above all, it contains an effective Call To Action. Less is more.

The business version of this is designed to get candidates. Not qualified employees, but candidates. Ideally your ad is so short, so relevant, so entertaining… members of your network are happy to forward it by email along to their network (more on that in a moment).

We all know the old maxim “no resume ever got a job” (only an interview). The same principle applies to job listings.

This is an ad — not a legal document that will be used 6 months from now to determine if the hired employee was successful. It is simply intended to get candidates.

Ditch the legalese… and the boilerplate.

In fact, if you detail in fine precision all the qualifications you want from the candidate, you will do a great job of attracting candidates who are obsessed with qualifications. Worse, they themselves are only impressed with companies that have lots of employees with lots of qualifications. Folks, that’s not startup material.

Let’s refine our goal: You don’t want to attract “qualified” candidates. You want to attract candidates that will perform beyond expectations and be a good fit with the team.

And publishing the job description? Way too much, too soon. It’s like handing out the answer key before the test. It’s like trying to find a spouse on the first date. Slow down, keep it light and lively.

#4 Use Your Network. Although I’m not biased against candidates that are unemployed and looking for a job (I’ve been there), in general you’d prefer candidates that aren’t really actively looking.

There are several reasons for this including: you can evaluate their recent performance, you see them in their native environment, and most importantly, you are unlikely to have to compete against other job offers, because they weren’t out collecting them.

If the candidate isn’t looking for you (because they’re employed), then you’ll have to look for them. This is easier than it sounds.

If you are a good leader, and your organization is doing interesting stuff, then I guarantee you that there are numerous people in your network who would love to have a small role in the movie called “my friend got this great job that was perfect for them.”

So after you have your ad in Step #3, then start sending it by email to selected individuals in your network.

Post it on Facebook. Put it in Linkedin.

Make it personal — so that it will be forwarded in a personal way. You want the 1:1 effect, not the broadcast method!

#5 You Do The Selection. Because your ad will be great at attracting interesting people, casting a wide net, you’ll have lots of culling to do.

This is a good thing.

You want to do the mapping of their experience to your needs — you don’t want them to do it for you, before you even get a chance to know they exist.

What I mean is that you are looking for a fit, and you know your organization best, and you know the specific challenges of the open position. An outsider and stranger would struggle to understand. So don’t let them rule you out, just because they don’t understand your team.

Cast a wide net, and look for fit, not credentials. If you get caught up in pattern-matching with traditional credentials you would miss a young Steve Jobs, young Bill Gates, and a host of other hardcore, top performers. Heck, you’d miss me.

For example, one of my clients was looking for a key employee in his new company, and understandably he listed “10 years experience as Director of Blah Blah required”. I immediately queried if he would take someone with 5 years experience if the 5 years was spent at the competing, premier company in Silicon Valley for that skill — and yes, of course he would.

Something as basic as years-of-experience is fungible. So why list it? You might miss a great candidate.

Putting It All Together

Here is a great example of a “personals ad” I saw a several years ago on an email list I was watching:

Date: Wed, Dec 1, 2010 at 4:25 PM

Subject: [SeattleTech] [JOB] Technical Program Manager at {name}

To: Seattle Tech Startups <organize@seattletechstartups.com>

{name} is hiring a Technical Program Manager

If you’re interested or have questions… I’d be more than happy to answer. But here are the important things:

You’ll be working on a product that people are paying for. They pay for it, and are happy to pay for it.

You’ll be working with a solid product team. Kick-ass and fun. Also, we’ve got years of start-up experience under our belts.

Do you like Chinese food? we do.

You’ll be working for the same guy that mentored me in my first PM roles. He’s awesome, and you’ll be a better PM and probably a better person after working for him.

We have a ton of data, and perform mind-boggling complex analytics on them. Then, we have to transform that into something that is easily digestable and understandable.

Let me know if you’re interested.

—

Adam

Okay, let’s notice a few things in this fabulous email:

First, there are no qualifications or specifics. This is not a job description. They’re keeping their cards close about who they want, but did you even notice?

If you’re a candidate… you will see the vocabulary “Technical Program Manager” and “PM” and “complex analytics” and you’ll get it, if you’re qualified in the most general sense.

While I’ve protected their identity here with the { symbols }, in the actual email it would be trivial to go visit their site and get some basic due diligence.

I would consider leaving the identity of your company completely out, so that candidates can’t go visit your site and make a decision before making contact with you.

But alternatively, if you’re in a strong position, why not let it be known… make that due diligence possible by naming names.

Second, it is personal. He wrote it like he was talking to a buddy or maybe old college friend. So I am drawn in, but at the same time its appropriate. I could have met Adam at a conference last week.

I’m going to read this, unlike most of the job openings that show up on this list… yawn, I’m too busy. By being personal it is both accessible and differentiated from the boilerplate listings.

Third, it is specific about fit. The cultural fit will determine success in a way that academic degrees and work history rarely do. While he is not specific about job qualifications, he is specific about the culture and where their startup is in the growth path… to anyone with any kind of startup experience under their belt, he’s provided the credibility… up front… that they are “successful” with specific metrics (revenue, price points).

In other words, if I have the relevant experience… I’m probably attracted to this pragmatic, upfront, open discussion of key metrics. Bingo!

Fourth, it is a sell. “you’ll be a better PM and probably a better person after working for him” — wow. Now you couldn’t say this about every open position… or could you?

As we would say in marketing, this is an explicit benefit statement… rather than the feature listing (“experienced management team”, “learning opportunities”, “opportunity for growth”, blah blah blah).

He is making an explicit conclusion about what you would get out of this gig, connecting the dots.

Fifth, a call to action. Adam offers to take questions. Note that he’s not the hiring manager. He doesn’t say send your application in to HR. He says he’ll take questions.

I don’t know what Adam will do, but I do know when I’m in this position… the moment I answer that first question, I start asking my own questions (See the chapter on Sales as Discovery).

In other words, he’s keeping the bar low and available, and if the query isn’t from a suitable candidate, that unsuitable candidate may just know others who… are suitable.

What a priceless opportunity.

Why is this “ad” so effective? It is personal, relevant, casts a wide net, and has a hook.

This is what you want to aspire towards to collect meaningful candidates, and help build the reputation of your company. If you were a potential investor, this email alone might inspire you to take a closer look at this particular company. And current team members, investors, and stakeholders might even be inspired.

There is no downside to this approach in recruiting. It is quite literally win-win-win.

In my next piece, I’ll talk about interview methodology, the next step.

Filed Under: Coaching, Entrepreneurs, Leadership, Sometimes A Blog

Ambiguity… the Entrepreneur’s Friend

June 26, 2013 by David

“Ambiguity” — may be the largest force in the entrepreneur’s life and ecosystem.  Funding, customers, product development — all beyond the control of the entrepreneur.  The ability to handle ambiguity is a factor that I’ve encountered again and again in not only startups, but in real life, particularly the harsh environment of the emergency first responder.

Incomplete data, incomplete facts, partially completed product, inconclusive market data, partial context… limited time… what do you do?  Is this a threat?  An opportunity?  A distraction best ignored?

And as a leader, is this “business as usual” or does the environment shake you to your core? render you frozen with indecision… Is ambiguity  “comfortable” or at least familiar?

Is ambiguity your friend, or your foe?

In any uncertain situation whether business, or a traffic accident, I believe it is essential that the leader, or a leadership team, be comfortable with ambiguity.  So how do you spot this rare animal in a leader (or potential leader)?

Use the test here: http://jasonseiden.com/handling-ambiguity/ because his simple tests… resonate with my experience:

  • Comfort with unclear social settings
  • Intellectually curious
  • Strong and demonstrable “action orientation”
  • Good judgment

I couldn’t agree more.  Time and again I’ve found that leaders with those qualities/attributes… do fine with ambiguity.  And leaders not “comfortable” (an odd word, in this context) with ambiguity… they’ll drive themselves nutty, or at least their families.  Been there, done that.

Don’t have what it takes?  Don’t fret… it probably means your normal.  The ability to handle ambiguity, while “impressive” in the abstract, isn’t “normal” — in fact, these leaders can be hard to live with, hard to follow, hard to understand.  Don’t believe Hollywood’s projection of a leader… just because your leader is comfortable with ambiguity doesn’t mean they’re right.  Or easy to follow.  You may be a top performer in the leadership team precisely because you are not comfortable with ambiguity.

Most high performance teams need a combination of leaders comfortable with ambiguity, and members of the leadership team that insist on unambiguous decisions and stratetgy — wisdom and superior execution are a complicated combination of both perspectives.

Filed Under: Entrepreneurs, Leadership, Sometimes A Blog Tagged With: coach, entrepreneur, founder, measurable objectives, shared values, startup

4 Words That Will Change Your Career

March 6, 2013 by David

Clients of mine will recognize these four words instantly.

It is my belief that nearly every question asked of you, in almost every situation, should be answered with these four words.  Circumstances and context will determine if you should answer the specific question first, and then use the magic four words, or use the four words even before answering the question.

I promise: if you adapt this as a practice, you will change the course of your career.  Quite possibly your life.  And you will be a better friend, a better partner to your spouse, and a far better parent.

I came to this insight the hard way.  I missed opportunities, derailed potential partnerships, and slowed potential sales… sometimes fatally.  I count my failures in both professional situations, and personal ones.

And like so many practices, just because I have learned the importance of this practice… doesn’t mean it is easy.  I have found that I must constantly practice this art, this method… in each important conversation.

Why Do You Ask?

The practice of asking that question — just four short words — is the key to unlocking what is in the depth of a question.  And it leads to real conversations, which in turn will have depth.

This practice invokes several key attributes of a high-quality conversation with another person:

  • Respect for the questioner, that their question matters
  • Curiosity
  • Active listening
  • A suspension of your arrogance or hubris

You gain all four of these attributes when you answer the question… and ask why they asked the question.  There is almost always a question behind the question.

For example, when a potential employee asks about the health benefits offered in your company, do you leap to answer with the facts about the program, either in an elegant summary or a detailed comprehensive answer… before asking why?  The question may indeed be innocuous and literal… or it may be because the candidate turned down a recent job offer because the benefits were inadequate.  Wouldn’t you like to know that before you answered, or before they leave the meeting?

In a similar situation, I often see entrepreneurs launch into a defensive answer about their product pricing with little more than an innocent question from a prospect who says “What about pricing?”   They miss the opportunity to understand the basics of the question — indeed there may be a concern about pricing, but its also possible that the real information is that the potential customer is at the earliest stages of research and seeks ballpark pricing for a budget request for next year, or the year after.  The context of the question may affect how you answer.

You see, almost everyone avoids asking the real question they want to ask.  Or they don’t want us to know why they’re asking, out of habit or strategy.  For many reasons they either overtly or subconsciously cloak the true basis of their question with… a polite question.

People blessed by nature or nurture with a high “EQ” (Emotional Quotient) understand that the first step to depth in a relationship, even a first-time business meeting, is empathy.  And that empathy is in part about seeing the situation from the other person’s perspective.  It is emphatically not about providing the other person with facts, an opinion, or the right answer.  Slow down, and make sure you understand the question from their perspective.  Why Do You Ask?

Engineers, analytic minds, and those who were straight-A students in school are often drawn into a question, hearing it as a literal, formal question, and leaping to answer it.  They’ve been waiting for “good questions”!  You can almost see them waving their arm in a desperate attempt to get the teacher to call on them, so they can demonstrate their mastery of the topic, and provide the correct (and often numbingly comprehensive) answer.

I blame the American culture and education system, where “getting an A”, being right, and “achieving” is supposedly the ultimate in self-actualization, and in turn has bred this instinct to answer the question quickly and forcefully.  Slow down.

Sure, answer the question in as brief a form as possible, and then respect the intelligence and intentions of the questioner with… your own question: “but Why Do You Ask?”

Better yet, pose Why do You Ask? before answering the question at all.  Together, you may discover the original question isn’t relevant, or perhaps even distracting.

Be curious, set aside your confidence that you know why they asked (isn’t it obvious?), be humble in the awareness that there may be far more to the question than you could ever know.

 

In February, 1999 one of the smartest and most accomplished “young” venture capitalists in Silicon Valley agreed to meet with me, as a favor to his colleague and our mutual friend, Ed Kozel, then the recently exited CTO of Cisco.  I had just co-founded a venture capital firm, and wanted to expand my network of co-investors.  Ed was doing me a big favor; ordinarily a tiny, unproven venture firm from Seattle wouldn’t have had a chance of getting this meeting.

Michael Moritz of Sequoia was as sharp, curious, and engaged as his reputation made him out to be; I knew that I was very lucky to be hosted for the visit in their offices.  We were both cordial and comfortable, and it was a pleasant conversation.  After I provided a brief summary of my past, we got down to the good stuff — and one of Moritz’s questions was whether there was a future in “search” as a business.

I had just sold my second startup to Infoseek / Walt Disney.  Quando was a boutique, customized search technology (we found events such as concerts, and pricing for products used in comparison shopping).  I remember thinking to myself “Hey, good question.  I mean, I actually know something about this stuff, and I also know that Infoseek has already started to ignore their search engine group… search as a business is almost over.”

I couldn’t tell you exactly what I said, but I know this: it was off the top of my head, I didn’t pause before answering, and I didn’t put much thought into it.  In fact, I can’t remember what I said.  But I was confident and pushed on, watching to see of what he made of my answer.  I will confess, I was eager to impress.

The gist of my answer was: I didn’t think there was much future in search.  Moritz asked again, this time asking if paying to be included in the results from a search engine could work as a business.  Again, I was dismissive… after all, we couldn’t figure out how to do it, so we hadn’t even tried to charge for search results, and instead we re-sold our search services wholesale to portals like America Online and Disney, which gave the search results away to their users.

Moritz pressed me at least a third time, maybe even a fourth… but I continued to be negative, imagining more dumb banner ads in the manner that they were displayed in 1999…  I saw a look cross his face that I didn’t understand, but the meeting soon ended, and I was ushered out the door.

I never spoke to Moritz again, and of course like everyone else, a couple of months later I read about his lead role in the first venture capital investment in a Stanford startup called Google.  $25 million invested in search.

Please understand that during the entire meeting I never asked Michael Moritz a single question.  I didn’t pose a single Why Do You Ask? to his questions, even when they were repeated.  I wasn’t curious, I wasn’t respectful, and I wasn’t really listening.  And I wanted an “A” in this class.

In the end, not only did I not really get anything out of the meeting (and neither did he, obviously)… but I missed an opportunity to learn about one of the most explosive business models in human history, from one of the people at the epicenter.  I missed the opportunity to deepen my relationship with an individual whom I admired and from whom I could have learned a great deal from in subsequent years.  I even disrespected the favor Ed did by arranging the meeting in the first place.  I whiffed this ball.

And it was a slow, underhand pitch.

I can give you countless other examples in my personal and professional past where I was too eager to answer the literal question, especially when I knew the answer, and as a result, missed the multiple opportunities that emerge when you are curious.

The thing is, I am curious, to my core.  I had the motive, but not the skills or the craft.

Adopt these four words as your practice, and use them both at home and in the office.  More than an attractive new habit, dedicate yourself to making this kind of interaction your skill and your craft.  And I guarantee you will deepen your relationships and enjoy more opportunities than you otherwise would.  Really.

 

p.s. see my Recommended Reading list for the just-published book To Sell Is Human: The Surprising Truth About Moving Others by the irrepressible Dan Pink on how this issue relates to sales.  An essential tool for all entrepreneurs, as the implications go far beyond what you may think of as “sales”.

Filed Under: Leadership, Sales, Sometimes A Blog Tagged With: cisco, coach, communication, curiosity, ed kozel, google, mentor, michael moritz, quando, walt disney

Accountability and Swift Termination

October 4, 2012 by David

Most experienced entrepreneurs will agree that they almost always took too long to terminate key employees when they don’t work out.

In World War II, the U.S. Army grew from 190,000 soldiers in 9 Divisions to 8,000,000 soldiers in 61 Divisions. General George Marshall is credited with instilling accountability in the officer ranks, including generals.

Below are excerpts from the Harvard Business Review article that I strongly recommend you acquire:

“As transformational leaders tend to do, Marshall began by focusing on people. He truly was ruthless in getting the right people in the right jobs—and the wrong people out of them. When Brigadier General Charles Bundel insisted that the army’s training manuals could not all be updated in three or four months and instead would require 18, Marshall twice asked him to reconsider that statement.

“It can’t be done,” Bundel repeated.

“I’m sorry, then you are relieved,” Marshall said.”

Can you imagine that in today’s army?

As you’ll learn in the article, the U.S. Army is no longer run that way (generals are almost never terminated, and certainly never swiftly when held accountable to a leadership goal).

Which way do you run your startup?  With accountability?  With swift action?

Filed Under: Leadership, Sometimes A Blog Tagged With: accountability, communication, founding principles, goals, harvard business school, HBS, leadership, measurable objectives, mindfulness, objectives

Brainstorming Doesn’t Work (and never has)

March 4, 2012 by David

Turns out that brainstorming doesn’t really work.  As early as 1958, Yale University ran experiments that showed single participants came up with roughly twice as many creative solutions as groups “brainstorming” did… and over time the numerous follow-up studies have consistently shown that brainstorming groups think of far fewer ideas than the same number of people who work alone, and then pool their ideas.

Sobering, eh?

What’s really impressive is that even the term, let alone the concept, was the totally made-up, unscientific “tool” presented to the business community by a advertising agency man in his book published in 1948 (predating the Mad Men era).

But since we’re bound to be working on problems as groups, even in a tiny startup, I strongly recommend you read the whole article to get the rest of the story, and implications for current day brainstorming.

Filed Under: Leadership, Sometimes A Blog Tagged With: communication, emotional intelligence, entrepreneur, group dynamics, leadership, marketing

Crazy, or Just Inspired?

January 4, 2012 by David

I was recently schooled on the importance of the “First Follower” in entrepreneurial startups, and the class was fully resonant.  In fact, I’m fairly embarrassed that I hadn’t realized the First Follower’s role before now.  Because it is essential.

The key here is that there isn’t much difference between a crazed whackjob and a brave new leader, at least not at first glance, and sometimes not even with the benefit of another look.  Is that guy crazy, or just inspired?

Let’s face it, we’ve all known for a long time that the #1 attribute of a entrepreneur is self-denial.  After all, the entrepreneur is going to hear constantly that It cannot be done, can’t be funded, can’t be built (or built affordebly), can’t be brought to market, can’t be (easily) sold, etc. etc.  Even the well-intended supporters can’t seem to stop themselves from pointing out the difficulties… and the entrepreneur has to ignore this input, has to practice self-denial and forge on ahead anyway.

But therein is the paradox.  An entrepreneur that ignores hard facts, hard constraints, and good advice… does so at their peril.  So how to balance the confidence to go on, no matter what, with the wisdom to listen and observe?

As we wonder about the individual on the whackjob-to-brilliance continuum, there is a test that almost everyone else is unconsciously waiting for: the First Follower.

This brief, 6 minute TED talk by Derek Sivers (founder of CD Baby, and quite a whackjob himself) you’ll see a vivid explanation of the concept: http://www.ted.com/talks/derek_sivers_how_to_start_a_movement.html

While we can lionize the courage of brave leaders, the most important test isn’t their idea (or themselves) but whether they can attract a First Follower.  As Sivers explains, the First Follower models for everyone else, what they should do.

Because the esteemed leader isn’t actually modeling the desired behavior.  He’s out in front, doing something crazy.  The First Follower is literally and figuratively the model of what the rest of us need to do, the catalyst from crazy idea to brilliance.

Obviously, that isn’t sufficient for success, but it is absolutely necessary.  And if you think about it, investors, journalists, candidate employees, and definitely customers are looking for it.

Think about it.

Filed Under: Entrepreneurs, Leadership, Sometimes A Blog Tagged With: entrepreneur, founder, leadership, marketing, shared values, startup

Steve Jobs

October 5, 2011 by David

There will be much said in the coming days from technology industry people far more articulate than me, with valuable insights and first-hand experience, regarding the passing of “Steve”. I’ll be interested in what they have to say, as it will be better than me. And since I’ve been using the products since the Apple-II and the Lisa, I’ll be eager to read them. But for tonight:

Someone once mentioned to me that Seattle was the only place they’d ever been where prestigious (and rich) business leaders were casually referred to by their first names, by people who had never worked with them. “Steve”, “Bill”, and “Paul”.

I had to agree with their observation. And add this: “Larry” in the Valley will never be as recognizable as “Steve”, and that habit started before “Bill”. I know this, because I went to high school in the Valley, with Apple employee #17 (yes, he was in high school too at the time, and he would give me a ride from school to Apple, and I’d walk home from there).  I’ve been keenly aware of Woz and Steve since then.

I didn’t even like him, but I admired him. And followed him.

Andy Grove was and is a great leader, and I kneel at the feet of Gordon Moore whom I had the honor of “working with” (I’m exaggerating my role) more than once. But Steve, well, Steve I could relate to. He wasn’t like me, but I thought maybe I was like him.

Dropped out of Reed College, check. Cultivated geeks more capable than himself, check. Started a company working the Net 30 financing method, check. Embraced UNIX before most knew what it was, check. Curious about everything and anything, check.

After that, it gets pretty different. Billions of dollars different, but other things too, many of which offend me still, decisions he made and people he screwed. I hope, not what I would have done, given his resources. And of course, he has awesome design (and I have none).

But I can’t deny it. He was not just figuratively, but literally, an inspiration. Thank you.

Filed Under: Entrepreneurs, Leadership, Sometimes A Blog Tagged With: entrepreneur, founder, leadership, startup, steve jobs

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David has been advising entrepreneurs and leaders since 1998. He founded Flashing Red Light eleven years ago. More about David...

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