Posts Tagged ‘Apple’

Discover, Follow, Pursue

Finally, I am able to make time to start blogging again. Sorry for the brief hiatus.

In light of giving a quick closure to my previous topic, “Do you fit the profile of a billionaire?” that is long overdue, I would like to conclude my thoughts in this single post! Since it was my fault for being MIA, I will try to spare your long-term memory. :) Hopefully, by starting with the profile trivia would help!

Let’s start by rolling with the 1st profile…

  • Breaking away from a successful family tradition

    Born to a prosperous family farm in Dearborn, Michigan, Henry Ford was groomed to continue his family business as a farmer. At that time, agriculture was the main crop of the economy and being a successful farmer sounded like a secure future. However, Ford disliked farm work, instead preferring to tinker with machinery. Not letting his comfort zone to deter him from pursuing his passion, at the age of 18, he left for Detroit to become an apprentice machinist. After working his way up to become a chief engineer at Thomas Edison’s Edison Illuminating Company, Ford decided to setup his own company. Despite his innate engineering talents, Ford failed twice. On his third try, he finally managed to establish what is now known as Ford Motor Company.
    (more…)

Posted by ieming.com on March 28th, 2009 1 Comment

An Adopted Child and A College Dropout

Steve Jobs did not come to earth with a good start. Born out of wedlock to a mother who could not afford him, he was setup for adoption right after birth. After attending a semester at Reed College in Portland, Oregon, Jobs felt that it was pointless to continue and called it quit. To make matter worse, at the age of 30, he was ousted from the company he co-founded. Certainly, his early life resembled a roller-coaster ride with more troughs than peaks. After such a crushing defeat, most CEOs would have given up corporate life and live in solitude with their big severance pay. Instead Jobs never lost his determination and marched on.

During his decade-long hiatus from Apple, he used this opportunity to explore the world to a greater multitude. Jobs met his future wife, Laurence Powell and eventually married her. He founded NeXT Computer to build the next generation computer systems. In fact, one of the systems produced, NeXTCube was used by Tim Berners-Lee to build the world’s first web server. He also groomed Pixar Animation Studio from an obscure movie studio to being a pioneer in producing fully computerized animation films with numerous box office hits.

Steve Jobs - Apple - Pixar - Nemo - Toy Story - iPhone - iPod

At present, Jobs is a happily-married family man with four children. When The Walt Disney Company bought his Pixar Animation Studio in all-stock transactions for US$7.4 billion in 2006, he became the largest shareholder of the company overnight. And with the acquisition of NeXT Computer by Apple Inc. back in 1997, his Chairman and CEO titles were restored. In a span of less than ten years, Jobs transformed Apple from a dying company with a series of failed products to become one of the most coveted companies in the world with a portfolio of market breakthrough products. On hindsight, his “lost decade” was a crossroad that paid off really huge dividends.

To top it all off, when most people could hardly shift the consumer market even once, Jobs did it four times! Through the introduction of Apple II, he ignited the vision of making personal computers available to ordinary citizens; through Pixar Animation Studio, he showed the world that life-like, emotion-driven and fully computer-animated films are possible; through his invention of the wildly popular iPod MP3 players, he changed the way how music are distributed; and just a year ago, through the birth of iPhone, he raised the bar of mobile phones. In all his executions, he never swayed away from his basic belief that a killer product will always find its audience. Now, Jobs is not only the most famous comeback CEO of all time, but he is also a role model for aspiring entrepreneurs.

So what makes Jobs tick? Let me just quote a passage from the man himself in his commencement speech at Stanford University, “Sometimes life hits you in the head with a brick. Don’t lose faith. I’m convinced that the only thing that kept me going was that I loved what I did. You’ve got to find what you love. And that is as true for your work as it is for your lovers. Your work is going to fill a large part of your life, and the only way to be truly satisfied is to do what you believe is great work. And the only way to do great work is to love what you do. If you haven’t found it yet, keep looking. Don’t settle. As with all matters of the heart, you’ll know when you find it. And, like any great relationship, it just gets better and better as the years roll on. So keep looking until you find it. Don’t settle.”

So what’s my takeaway from Steve Jobs’ life story? Here’s my two cents:

You may be born into an unpleasant world; you may encounter difficult situations; you may get lost in a crossroad; whatever circumstances that might have come across your way, they don’t matter. You can still achieve greatness in life as long as you never lose yourself in the process and follow these three basic principles:

  1. Find what you love
  2. Love what you do
  3. Don’t stop until you can satisfy rules (1) and (2)

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Posted by ieming.com on July 9th, 2008 8 Comments

Surprise, Surprise, Surprise

I am really surprised by the number of responses I received. Then again, I am even more surprised by the variety of guesses. (If you don’t understand what this means, check out this posting.) Without any analysis, this is really a democratic way of saying that nobody really knows which profile favors you to become a billionaire.

Without further ado, please allow me to reveal the name behind each profile. Let’s see how many of them you guess it right.

  1. Breaking away from a successful family tradition
    Henry Ford
    Founder of Ford Motor Company

  2. An adopted child and a college dropout
    Steve Jobs
    Co-founder and CEO of Apple Inc.

  3. A poor immigrant and a high school dropout
    Li Ka Shing
    Chariman of Hutchison Whampoa Limited Company

  4. A bitter childhood
    Oprah Winfrey
    Talk Host of “The Oprah Winfrey Show”

  5. Born with a bad gene
    Richard Branson
    Founder and CEO of Virgin Group

  6. Single parent living off welfare
    J.K. Rowling
    Author of Harry Potter Book Collection

  7. Taking an unpopular vocation
    Guy Laliberté
    Co-founder and CEO of Cirque du Soleil

  8. Son of an orthodontist and a money-manager
    Michael Dell
    Chariman and CEO of Dell Computers

  9. Son of a local stock broker
    Warren Buffett
    Chariman and CEO of Berkshire Hathaway

  10. Member of the royal family
    Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal Alsaud
    Member of Saudi Royal Family

Surprise, Surprise, Surprise!!! All of them are actually billionaires. Statistically speaking, the first seven candidates are lucky if they don’t become part of the statistics. Now, they are not only self-made billionaires, they are also life changing agents to millions of people around the world.

  • How do they do it?
  • Where do they come from?
  • Why do systems misjudged them?
  • Which major I need to take to join the billionaire club?
  • What makes it possible for them when I can’t even make ten million bucks?
    ……..

I am sure many of similar types of questions start to linger around, which is what prompted me to start this series. After spending some time to study their life story, I learnt that they never actually plan to become a billionaire. In fact, during their period, being a millionaire is more than enough. Instead, what I observed is that they all understood three basic tenets of life; when they do master them, they achieve life success beyond their wildest dreams. In other words, each of us who reads this post today is a potential billionaire.

To avoid information overload, I will share their secret sauce in my next post. See you again soon.

Posted by ieming.com on June 27th, 2008 6 Comments