excitement

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Sunday, June 03, 2007

Steve & Bill talks about Passions

Rob: Thanks, Steve and Bill. Rob Killion, here with my business partner. We’ve got a 100-person Internet media business. I’m wondering what would be the single most valuable piece of advice you’d give us to even attempt to create some of the value that you guys have done in both your very impressive companies.

Bill: Well, I think actually–it may be in both cases–correct me if I’m wrong–the excitement wasn’t really seeing the economic value. You know, even when we wrote down at Microsoft in 1975, “a computer on every desk and in every home,” we didn’t realize, oh, we’ll have to be a big company. Every time, I thought, “Oh, God, can we double in size?” Jeez, can we manage that many people? Will that feel fun still? You know, and so every doubling was, like, okay, this is the last one. And so the economic thing wasn’t at the forefront. The idea of being at the forefront and seeing new things and things we wanted to do and being able to bring in different people who were fun to work with eventually with a pretty broad set of skills and figuring out how to get those people those broad skills to work well together has been one of the greatest challenges. You know, I made more of my mistakes in that area maybe than anywhere, but, you know, eventually getting some of those teams to work very well together. So, you know, I think it’s a lot about the people and the passion. And it’s amazing that the business worked out the way that it did.

Steve: Yeah. People say you have to have a lot of passion for what you’re doing and it’s totally true. And the reason is because it’s so hard that if you don’t, any rational person would give up. It’s really hard. And you have to do it over a sustained period of time. So if you don’t love it, if you’re not having fun doing it, you don’t really love it, you’re going to give up. And that’s what happens to most people, actually. If you really look at the ones that ended up, you know, being “successful” in the eyes of society and the ones that didn’t, oftentimes, it’s the ones [who] were successful loved what they did so they could persevere, you know, when it got really tough. And the ones that didn’t love it quit because they’re sane, right? Who would want to put up with this stuff if you don’t love it?

So it’s a lot of hard work and it’s a lot of worrying constantly and if you don’t love it, you’re going to fail. So you’ve got to love it and you’ve got to have passion and I think that’s the high-order bit.

The second thing is, you’ve got to be a really good talent scout because no matter how smart you are, you need a team of great people and you’ve got to figure out how to size people up fairly quickly, make decisions without knowing people too well and hire them and, you know, see how you do and refine your intuition and be able to help, you know, build an organization that can eventually just, you know, build itself because you need great people around you.

Walt: Lise.

Saturday, October 28, 2006

NIKE FACTORY

Cool Stuffs:

http://www.everythingtoeveryone.com/PHOTOS/NIKE_FACTORY_OCT_24/index.htm#68

Wednesday, July 26, 2006

Google Power

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aeb_or6-N0s

Steve Jobs on Entreprenuership

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rdPxKDJzt7Q

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=efnKLV7wSNk

Steve Jobs on Entreprenuership

Interesting Visual Tips

posted by Brian @ 4:43 AM 0 comments

Wednesday, February 08, 2006

Sharpen your Vision

I need to sharpen my vision in knowing the direction I wanted to achieve. How much money you want to earned, and what history you want to create. Don’t be too abrupt, research in your idea, strengthen it, believed in it and make it a full swing! Go as far as possible. Some times you don't need to be Eddison to come out with an great idea that no other had invented. Identify the weakness of your competitior and strength it to be yours.

Find your team, your powerful strategies that conquer the world. You don’t need to be a master of all trade. Identify your strength and know your weakness. Find talents to fill in what you doesn’t posses. 5 Important teammates; 1) Administrator who does your paper work 2) Technical expertise who have the skills in that area e.g. Master or PhD students 3) Collaborator who are able to manage & change the system in your company competence efficiently 4) Visionaries who know the direction to sail and able to make a small company complete with big players. It’s like an advisor in the warring period in china, e.g. Zhu Ge Liang 5) Convincer who are able to convince the team or the client that your idea works and pushes it all the way. Richard Branson is a good example.

Saturday, February 04, 2006

Words to Learn

Messianic Zeal

Messianic: marked by idealism
Zeal: eagerness and ardent interest in pursuit of something

Saturday, January 21, 2006

Great Quotes

"Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things you didn't do than by the ones you did do.
So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbor.
Catch the trade winds in your sails.
Explore. Dream. Discover."
~ Mark Twain,
19th century US author and humorist
" I discovered that a lot of the briefs we were given from marketing weren't based on any knowledge of what people were actually doing, but rather on what the "experts" claimed they were. It gave me a healthy skepticism of accepting something as you get it and beginning your work based on that premise; I quickly learned the necessity of stepping back and doing my own research."
--Gianfranco Zaccai, CEO Design Contiuum

"Interest groups are the new geography."
—Steve Murphy, president and CEO, Rodale Inc.


"All great executives need to be ambidextrous. They need to have IQ and EQ in equal measure. Creativity and discipline. Love for high art and mass-market culture. "
-Steve Murphy, president and CEO of Rodale Inc

Thursday, December 22, 2005

Ground Zero

Ground Zero is the situation for me now. I loss all my faith and direction. Exam results are worst than I expected, CAP score had drop drastically. In addition, I have some problems in my NOC. I have not secure my internship yet, and I do not have the money for the exchange programme. Waiting for companies to reply is energy absorbing, and my morale is getting lower & lower everyday. Worst, I am totally broke now, with only $10 left in my wallet! Its the worst time in NUS, a situation where my belief and soul are lost!
Give me back my power please!