The greatest people are self-managing.
They don’t need to be managed.
If they know:
What they need is a common vision, and that’s what leadership is.
What leadership is having a vision, being able to articulate that so the people around you can understand it, and getting a consensus on a common vision.
The latest understanding of where technology was and what we could do with that technology, and we wanted to bring that to lots of people.
So the neatest thing that happens is when you get a core group of, you know, ten great people, it becomes self-policing as to who they let into that group.
We agonized over hiring. We had interviews.
I'd go back and look at some of the interviews again. They would start at 9:00 or 10:00 in the morning and go through dinner.
A new interviewee would talk to everybody in the building at least once and maybe a couple times, and then come back for another round of interviews, and then we’d all get together and talk about it.
And then they'd fill out an application. No, they never filled out an application.
The critical part of the interview, at least to my mind, was when we finally decided we liked them enough to show them the Macintosh prototype and then we sat them down in front of it.
If they were just kind of bored, or said: “This is a nice computer,”
We didn’t want them. We wanted their eyes to light up and for them to get really excited, and then we knew they were one of us. And everybody just wanted to work.
Not because it was work that had to be done, but it was because something we really believed in that was just going to really make a difference.
And that’s what kept the whole thing going.
We all wanted exactly the same thing, instead of spending our time arguing about what the computer should be.
We all knew what the computer should be, and went just went and did it.
We went through that stage in Apple where we went out and thought oh, we’re gonna be a big company, let’s hire professional management.
Why do you want to work for somebody you can’t learn anything from?
Thirty-two years old, an English Literature major with an MBA from Stanford, Debbie was a financial manager with no experience in manufacturing.
It’s an incredible, high risk both for myself, personally and professionally, and for Apple as a company, to put a person like myself in this job.
I mean, they’re really betting on a lot of things.
We’re betting that my skills at organizational effectiveness, you know, override all lack of technology, lack of experience, lack of, you know, time in manufacturing.
This is a place where people were afforded incredibly unique opportunities to prove that they could do.
They could write the book again.
[narrator] Inscribed inside the casing of every Macintosh, unseen by the consumer, are the signatures of the whole team.
This is Apple’s way of affirming that their latest innovation is a product of the individuals who created it, not the corporation.