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Inside Apple: How America's Most…
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Inside Apple: How America's Most Admired--And Secretive--Company Really Works (edition 2012)

by Adam Lashinsky (Author)

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3281680,053 (3.39)6
Inside Apple reveals the secret systems, tactics and leadership strategies that allowed Steve Jobs and his company to churn out hit after hit and inspire a cult-like following for its products. If Apple is Silicon Valley's answer to Willy Wonka's Chocolate Factory, then author Adam Lashinsky provides readers with a golden ticket to step inside. In this primer on leadership and innovation, the author will introduce readers to concepts like the "DRI" (Apple's practice of assigning a Directly Responsible Individual to every task) and the Top 100 (an annual ritual in which 100 up-and-coming executives are tapped a la Skull & Bones for a secret retreat with company founder Steve Jobs). Based on numerous interviews, the book offers exclusive new information about how Apple innovates, deals with its suppliers and is handling the transition into the Post Jobs Era. Lashinsky, a Senior Editor at Large for Fortune, knows the subject cold: In a 2008 cover story for the magazine entitled The Genius Behind Steve: Could Operations Whiz Tim Cook Run The Company Someday he predicted that Tim Cook, then an unknown, would eventually succeed Steve Jobs as CEO. While Inside Apple is ostensibly a deep dive into one, unique company (and its ecosystem of suppliers, investors, employees and competitors), the lessons about Jobs, leadership, product design and marketing are universal. They should appeal to anyone hoping to bring some of that Apple magic to their own company, career, or creative endeavor.… (more)
Member:ajschumacher
Title:Inside Apple: How America's Most Admired--And Secretive--Company Really Works
Authors:Adam Lashinsky (Author)
Info:Business Plus (2012), 223 pages
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Inside Apple: How America's Most Admired--and Secretive--Company Really Works by Adam Lashinsky

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English (6)  French (6)  Dutch (1)  German (1)  All languages (14)
Showing 1-5 of 6 (next | show all)
This book provides a very interesting view inside Apple. Given the sources cited, it appears to be fairly accurate, but it would be impossible to tell for sure. The authors perspective on Apple products and the company seems pretty balanced. The only thing I'm not sure about are some of the conclusions he draws about the future of the company. He certainly is entitled to express an opinion, but I'm not sure I agree with it. He also portrays his opinion as if it were quite likely and agreed to by other pundits. Still, this was a good read. ( )
  GadgetComa | Jan 13, 2024 |
Having read other books on Apple and Steve Jobs gave me enough idea about the theme of this book. The book has interesting information about organizational structure, day-to-day activities, key personnel etc.

However in his attempt to be realistic and present an outsider view of Apple, Adam was painfully skeptical about the post-Jobs era. ( )
  harishwriter | Oct 12, 2023 |
The theme was clear. Apple was dominated by Steve Jobs. The word most often used was narcissistic. The message was autocratic. He micromanaged to an amazing degree. Although the theme was repeated over and over, the text stayed interesting.

"There is no other field of human activity - including entertainment, sports, high fashion, or politics - which is so riddled by fads as business. ... At the least, the study of business history can prompt an executive to ask of each new 'solution' to problems that can never be solved but only managed: How really lasting is this approach, this idea, this company?" (Page 160)

"Geoffrey West, ... studies the life span of organizations. ... cities with few exceptions, never die. ... The exact opposite is true for companies, which not only tend to die, but behave like living organisms." (Page 172)

"Apple is a company of paradoxes. ..." (Page 175) and the author goes on to summarize some of the paradoxes.

An engrossing read. ( )
  bread2u | Jul 1, 2020 |
For more reviews and bookish posts please visit: http://www.ManOfLaBook.com

Inside Apple by Adam Lashinsky is a non-fiction book which brings the reader into the behind the scenes world at Apple. Mr. Lashinsky, an editor-at-large of Fortune magazine (as the reader is reminded numerous times) seems to be the right person, with the right connections, for this book.

Even though I’m not an Apple fanboy, I barely owned two iPods in my whole life, I thought it would be interesting to read Inside Apple by Adam Lashinsky from a business point of view. There is no denying the great success of Apple, whether or not you own or enjoy their products is a different matter altogether, one of a personal preference.

Apple has fascinated many people, including myself, mainly because of the secrecy and tight control they have over their employees and facilities. This book, even though it also seemed tightly edited, is an entertaining and fascinating look into the company.

This book has something for everyone, whether you’re just reading it for entertainment purposes, a few new ideas for entrepreneurship, or just a fanboy. I realized that Apple’s brilliance was to merge fashion and technology (as well as stellar customer service and easy interfaces) and always wanted to know more about how the two, seemingly separate industries, merged in one company.

From the book I gathered that Apple is very secretive about it’s development, probably rightly so. If you are not working on some particular project, you simply don’t have access to it. As a supervisor, you could be locked out of rooms that your subordinates have access to – and that’s OK.
That’s the culture.

New employees, so I learned, are expected to already know how to hook up their brand new Mac computers when they join. If you don’t than you’re in the wrong job. That whole section seemed wrong to me for a company that prides itself on ingenuity and new ideas.
Don’t you want some outsider to come in with new ideas?

Most of the book is concentrated on the years after Steve Jobs returned to Apple in 1997. While not covering the beginning of the company like, Becoming Steve Jobs: The Evolution of a Reckless Upstart into a Visionary Leader by Brent Schlender & Rick Tetzeli, it does tell the reader much about the iPhone, a device which no doubt changed the world.

The book gives the reader much insight into Apple’s senior executives and the team that has been responsible for its continued success after Steve Jobs. I thought that these insights alone were worth reading the book. ( )
  ZoharLaor | Sep 18, 2018 |
A quick read, and much better than the Steve Jobs biography. Lashinsky actually delves into what makes Apple tick, rather than the flurry of insider details and anecdotes that Isaacson delivered. ( )
  gregorybrown | Oct 18, 2015 |
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Inside Apple reveals the secret systems, tactics and leadership strategies that allowed Steve Jobs and his company to churn out hit after hit and inspire a cult-like following for its products. If Apple is Silicon Valley's answer to Willy Wonka's Chocolate Factory, then author Adam Lashinsky provides readers with a golden ticket to step inside. In this primer on leadership and innovation, the author will introduce readers to concepts like the "DRI" (Apple's practice of assigning a Directly Responsible Individual to every task) and the Top 100 (an annual ritual in which 100 up-and-coming executives are tapped a la Skull & Bones for a secret retreat with company founder Steve Jobs). Based on numerous interviews, the book offers exclusive new information about how Apple innovates, deals with its suppliers and is handling the transition into the Post Jobs Era. Lashinsky, a Senior Editor at Large for Fortune, knows the subject cold: In a 2008 cover story for the magazine entitled The Genius Behind Steve: Could Operations Whiz Tim Cook Run The Company Someday he predicted that Tim Cook, then an unknown, would eventually succeed Steve Jobs as CEO. While Inside Apple is ostensibly a deep dive into one, unique company (and its ecosystem of suppliers, investors, employees and competitors), the lessons about Jobs, leadership, product design and marketing are universal. They should appeal to anyone hoping to bring some of that Apple magic to their own company, career, or creative endeavor.

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