BY
SFGATE.COM
San
Francisco, TAG – In Oct. 2011, Steve Jobs passed away at the age of 56. He had
just left the CEO post at Apple, the company he cofounded, for the second time. Jobs was an
entrepreneur, through and through, and the story of his rise is the story of
Apple as a company, along with some very interesting twists. In this article,
we'll look at the career of Steve Jobs and the company he founded, as well as
some of the lessons there are for would-be entrepreneurs.
Steve Jobs got his start in business with another
Steve - Steve Wozniak - building the blue boxes that phone phreakers used to
make free calls all around the nation. The two were members of the HomeBrew
Computer Club where they quickly became enamored with kit computers, leaving
the blue boxes behind. The next product the two sold was the Apple I. It was a
kit for building a PC; one that the customer needed to add a monitor and
keyboard to before they could do anything with them.
With Wozniak doing most of the building and Jobs
handling the sales, the two made enough money off the hobbyist market to invest
in the Apple II. It was the Apple II that made the company. Jobs and Wozniak
created enough interest in their new product to attract venture capital. This meant they were in the big leagues and their company,
Apple, was officially incorporated in 1977. Steve Jobs was a month shy of his 22nd birthday and would be a
millionaire by his 23rd.
By 1978, Apple was making $2 million in profits solely
on the strength of the Apple II. The Apple II wasn't state of the art, but it
did allow computer enthusiasts to create and sell their own programs. Among
these user generated programs was VisiCalc, a type of proto-excel that
represented the first software with business applications. Although Apple did
not profit directly from these programs, they did see more interest as the uses
for the Apple II broadened. This model of allowing users to create their own
programs and sell them would reappear in the app market of the future, but with
a much tighter business strategy around it.
By the time Apple went public in 1980, the dynamic of
the company was more or less set. Steve Jobs was the fiery visionary, with an
intense and often combative management style, and Steve Wozniak was the quiet
genius who made the vision work. The board of Apple wasn't too fond of such a
power imbalance in the company, however. Jobs and the board agreed to add John
Sculley to the executive team in 1983. In 1985, the board ousted Jobs in favor of Sculley.
Steve Jobs was rich and unemployed. Although he wasn't
working at Apple, he was far from idle. During this time, from 1985 to 1996,
Jobs was involved in two big deals; the first was an investment. In 1986, Jobs
purchased a controlling stake in a company called Pixar from George Lucas. The
company was struggling, but their eventual success in digital animation led to
an initial public offering (IPO) that earned Jobs around $1 billion at the time
of the IPO.
The second was a return to his old obsession with
computers, founding NeXT to create high-end computers. These were expensive
machines with an operating system that represented the best attempt, yet, at
making the power of UNIX fit into a graphical user interface. When Tim
Berners-Lee created the World Wide Web, he did so using a NeXT machine.
Of these two deals, NeXT proved the most important, as
it turned out that Apple was looking to replace its operating system. Apple
bought NeXT in 1996 for its operating system, bringing Steve Jobs back to the
first company he founded.[]
Steve Jobs And The Apple Story
Reviewed by theacehglobe
on
January 13, 2012
Rating:

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