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The 7 Innovation Secrets of Steve Jobs - Forbes
8/9/15, 8:35 AM
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Carmine Gallo Contributor
I write about success, leadership and communication.
Opinions expressed by Forbes Contributors are their own.
LEADERSHIP
5/02/2014 @ 10:03AM
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The 7 Innovation Secrets of
Steve Jobs
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“The cure for Apple is not cost-cutting; the cure for Apple is to innovate its
way out of its current predicament.” Steve Jobs made that bold statement
when he returned to Apple after a 12-year absence. Apple was close to
bankruptcy. We all know what happened next. Steve Jobs launched one
innovation after another after another, revolutionizing computers,
entertainment, music, retail, mobile, and telecommunications. It’s no wonder
that CNBC named Steve Jobs the #1 most innovative and transformative
business leader of the past 25 years.
As The New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman once wrote, “The day of
average is over. Average only guarantees below average results.” Steve Jobs
never thought average thoughts, even as he and partner Steve Wozniak were
fiddling with electronics in the spare bedroom left vacant when Steve Jobs’
sister moved out of her room. It was only after the two visionaries outgrew the
bedroom that they moved to the kitchen, and eventually the more spacious
garage.
The seven principles that Jobs used to achieve his breakthrough success are
available to any business leader in any field who hopes to create radical
transformation.
Do what you love. Passion is everything. Innovation doesn’t happen
without it. Dig deep to identify your true passion. Steve Jobs was not
passionate about computers; he was passionate about building tools to help
people unleash their potential. One of the most profound remarks Jobs ever
made occurred at the end of one of his last major public presentations. Jobs
said, “It’s the intersection of technology and liberal arts that makes our hearts
sing.”
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Ask yourself, “What makes your heart sing?” Follow the answer.
Put a dent in the universe. Passion fuels the rocket; vision directs the
rocket to its ultimate destination. In the mid-1970s personal computers were
largely limited to hobbyists who assembled parts from kits. Jobs and cofounder Steve Wozniak had a vision to “put a computer in the hands of
everyday people.” A bold, specific vision inspires evangelists and sets forces in
motion. Jobs once said the role of a leader is to hire the best people and to
keep them aligned toward achieving the vision.
Keep your team focused on the big picture.
Creativity is connecting things. Steve Jobs believed that a broad set of
experiences lead people to conclusions that others might have missed. He was
on to something. Harvard researchers spent half a decade studying the
world’s greatest innovators. They found that innovators “associate” ideas
from different fields and apply them to the product or service they’re working
on. Those researchers could have saved themselves a lot of time by simply
interviewing Steve Jobs, who used experiences to inspire his best ideas. Jobs
didn’t always know where the dots would connect, but connect they did. Jobs
took calligraphy in college; a course with no practical application to his life. It
all came back later with Macintosh, the first computer with beautiful typeface,
fonts, and calligraphy.
Bombard your mind with new experiences completely outside of your chosen
field.
Say no to 1,000 things. “Innovation comes from saying no to 1,000
things,” said Jobs. When Jobs returned to Apple he dramatically reduced the
number of products the company made so each product had an A-team. When
Jobs introduced the iPhone in 2007 he pointed out that while other
smartphone makers were adding features and buttons, the iPhone would
remove them, making it simpler, cleaner, and user-friendly. Visit the Apple
Website. When the company introduces a new product it doesn’t add the
product image and content to a cluttered homepage. It removes clutter,
focusing on the product it wants to highlight.
Start saying “no” more often.
Create “insanely great” experiences. Steve Jobs innovated around the
customer experience by benchmarking against the very best models in
customer service. When I did my research for a book on the Apple Retail
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model I learned that the Apple Store was inspired by The Ritz-Carlton. Jobs
didn’t choose to look at his competitors; he had a bigger vision for what a
consumer experience might look like in a retail store selling computers.
Create exceptional experiences for every customer, every time.
Master the message. Steve Jobs was a master storyteller, but he worked at
it. His presentation skills were refined over many years and hours and hours
of practice. You can have great ideas, but if you cannot convince others to take
action on those ideas they won’t turn into truly innovative new products and
services.
Refine your product story.
Sell dreams, not products. Ultimately Steve Jobs was successful because
he sold dreams, not products. When Jobs opened the first Apple Store in 2001
he said the store was not meant to ‘sell computers.’ Instead it would ‘enrich
lives.’ Nobody cares about your product. They care about themselves. Create
products that help people achieve their dreams and you’ll win them over.
Stop selling products and start enriching lives.
Innovation sits in a lonely place because few people have the courage to
dream big, pitch radically different ideas, and the conviction to follow through
with their idea when they hear the skeptics say, “It won’t work.” Steve Jobs
followed his heart and didn’t let anyone stand in the way. “Don’t let the noise
of others’ opinions drown out your own inner voice,” Jobs once said. “And
most important, have the courage to follow your heart and intuition. They
somehow already know what you truly want to become.”
Carmine Gallo is a communication coach, popular keynote speaker and
bestselling author of 7 books including “The Innovation Secrets of Steve
Jobs,” and his latest bestseller, “Talk Like TED: The 9 Public-Speaking
Secrets of the World’s Top Minds.”
This article is available online at: http://onforb.es/1kvVqC4
http://www.forbes.com/sites/carminegallo/2014/05/02/the-7-innovation-secrets-of-steve-jobs/print/
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