The
Secret Of Steve Jobs
The secret of Steve is simple. It
explains his success and excess. It exemplifies our instinct for creation.
Creating is not a result of genius, unconscious incubation or aha! moments. It
is a result of thinking: a series of mental steps consisting of problem,
solution, repeat. The best solutions solve the most problems. This was
discovered in the 1930s by psychologist Karl Duncker:
“ … action means acting, guided by knowledge of the purpose
and of the means. This structure of action is no ‘definition,’ but an original
and basic experience of mankind. Also the question, ‘Why doesn’t it work?’ or,
‘What should I change to make it work?’”
Jobs announced Apple’s new cell
phone, the iPhone, in 2007:
“The most advanced phones are called smart phones. They are
definitely a little smarter, but they actually are harder to use. They all have
these keyboards that are there whether you need them or not. How do you solve
this? We solved it in computers 20 years ago. We solved it with a screen that
could display anything. What we’re going to do is get rid of all these buttons
and just make a giant screen. We don’t want to carry around a mouse. We’re
going to use a stylus. No. You have to get them and put them away, and you lose
them. We’re going to use our fingers.”
Jobs is using steps like the ones
Duncker saw. Problem: Smarter phones are harder to use because they have
permanent keyboards. Solution: A big screen and a pointer. Problem:
What kind of pointer? Solution: A mouse. Problem: We don’t want
to carry a mouse around. Solution: A stylus. Problem: A stylus
might get lost. Solution: Use our fingers.
Apple sold 4 million phones in 2007,
14 million in 2008, 29 million in 2009, 40 million in 2010, and 82 million in
2011 for a total of 155 million phones sold in its first five years in the
phone business despite charging a higher price than its competitors. How?
For several years I was a member of
the research advisory board of a company that made cell phones. Every year it
gave me its latest phone. I found each one harder to use than the last, as did
other board members. It was no secret Apple might make a phone: The risk was
always dismissed, since Apple had never made a phone. A few months after
Apple’s phone became available, the board met and I asked what the company
thought of it. The Chief Engineer said, “It has a really bad microphone.”
This was true, irrelevant, and
revealing. This company thought smart phones were phones, only smarter. They
had made some of the first cell phones which, of course had buttons on them.
These had been successful. As they added smarts they added buttons. A good
phone made a good phone call. The smart stuff was a bonus.
Apple made computers. For Apple, as
Jobs’s announcement made clear, a smart phone was not a phone. It was a
computer for your pocket that among other things made calls. Making computers
was a problem that Apple, as Jobs described it, “solved” 20 years ago. It did
not matter that Apple had never made a phone. It did matter that phone
makers had never made a computer. The company I was advising, once a leading
phone manufacturer, lost a large amount of money in 2007, saw its market share
collapse, and was eventually sold.
“Why doesn’t it work?” deceives us
with its simplicity. The first challenge is asking it. The Chief Engineer
refused to consider this question. His logic: Sales are rising and customers
are happy, therefore nothing is broken and there is nothing to fix.
Sales + Customers = Nothing Broken is the formula for corporate cyanide. Most big companies
that die kill themselves drinking it. Complacency is an enemy. “If it ain’t
broke don’t fix it,” is an impossible idiom. No matter what the sales, no
matter what the customer satisfaction, there is always something to fix. Asking,
“Why doesn’t it work?” is creation’s inhalation. Answering is breathing out.
Innovation becomes suffocation without it.
“Why doesn’t it work?” has the pull
of a pole star. It sets creation’s direction. For Jobs and the iPhone the
critical point of departure was not finding a solution but seeing a problem:
the problem of permanent keyboards making smarter phones harder to use.
Everything else followed.
Apple was not unique. Korean
electronics giant LG launched a product much like the iPhone before the iPhone
was announced. The LG Prada had a full-size touch screen, won design
awards, and sold a million units. When Apple’s very similar direction — a big
touch screen — was revealed, competitors built near replicas within months.
These other companies could make an iPhone but they could not conceive one.
They could not look at their existing products and ask, “Why doesn’t it work?”
The secret of Steve was evident in
1983, during the sunrise of the personal computer, when he spoke at a design
conference in Aspen, Colorado. There was no stage and there were no visual
aids. Jobs stood behind a lectern with yearbook hair, a thin white shirt, its
sleeves folded as far as his forearms and — “they paid me sixty dollars so I
wore a tie” — a pink and green bow tie. The audience was small. He gestured
wildly as he spoke, frothing with a penetrating vision of computers including
“portable computers with radio links," “electronic mailboxes,” and
“electronic maps.” Apple Computer, of which Jobs was then co-founder and a
director, was a six-year-old startup playing David to IBM’s Goliath. Apple’s
sling was sales. The company had sold more personal computers than any other in
1981 and 1982. It expected its market to grow to ten million computers by 1986.
But despite the altitude of his optimism, Jobs was dissatisfied:
“If you look at computers, they look like garbage. All the
great product designers are off designing automobiles or buildings but hardly
any of them are designing computers. We’re going to sell ten million computers
in 1986. Whether they look like a piece a shit or they look great. There are
going to be these new objects in everyone’s working environment, in everyone’s
educational environment, in everyone’s home environment. And we have a shot at
putting a great object there. Or if we don’t, we’re going to put one more piece
of junk there. By 1986 or 1987 people are going to be spending more time
interacting with these machines than they spend in a car. And so industrial
design, software design and how people interact with these things must be given
the consideration that we give automobiles today if not a lot more.”
Twenty-eight years later, Walt
Mossberg, technology columnist for the Wall Street Journal, described
the same discussion as it happened near the end of Jobs’s life:
“One minute he’d be talking about sweeping ideas for the
digital revolution. The next about why Apple’s current products were awful, and
how a color, or angle, or curve, or icon was embarrassing.”
A good salesman sells everybody. A
great salesman sells everybody but himself. What made Steve Jobs think
different was not genius, passion, or vision. It was his refusal to believe
sales and customers meant nothing was broken. He enshrined this in the name of
Apple’s campus: Infinite Loop. The secret of Steve was that he was never
satisfied. He devoted his life to asking, “Why doesn’t it work?” and, “What
should I change to make it work?”
https://medium.com/thoughts-on-creativity/925f2a59780d
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