2025 International Pawn Symposium At long
Ladies and Gentlemen in Pawnland!
It is with great sadness that I bring you the following post. AS most of you know by now, Steve Jobs founder of Apple has passed away at age 56. It certainly appears that there has never been a more iconic man in all of modern history as Steve Jobs was.
His vision, his insight and his constant strife for something new and better to make our lives better never ceased in his creative and productive imagination.
His company has touched every single technical life on the planet today in some form or fashion. I remember some years ago I watched a program entitled “revenge of the nerds”. The program was all about Steve Jobs, Wozniak and Bill Gates to name a few. The highlight of the program for me is when they featured a prominent Wall Street Banker.
He talked about the first time he met Steve Jobs. He said, he was in his ivory tower somewhere in Wall Street with the suit crowd and one day a most unusual gentleman walked into his office. He said the man was in his jeans, had on flip flops, an aloha shirt and a pony tail and was so far away from the day to day suits of Wall Street he felt compelled to listen to him. Steve went on to put a homemade contraption on his desk that was actually a small working home computer. The banker described Steve’s eagerness and desire to create affordable computers for anyone who wanted one. He was ahead of the curve and full of emotion.
The banker went on to say, they put the first seed money into Apple Computers and over the next twenty years or so, his firm made more than 30 billion dollars on their investment with them.
Talk about the right place at the right time in History. Today Apple computers has a market cap value in excess of 350 Billion Dollars and is one of the most highly valued companies in the world. Wow is all I can say about that!
All of this also struck another nerve in me, I recently turned 51 and the life speed or light speed of life seems to be moving much faster. My grandpa once said to me, “son life is like a roll of toilet paper, the closer you get to the end, the faster it goes”.
Nothing in my life could seem truer today. There is so much more I want to do and to introduce to our industry on a global basis and it just never seems there is enough time.
Some of the lessons of Steve’s you will see below are about making the best of your time now. Love what you do and put everything into that you can to make a difference.
As I have said at many of my public speaking engagements and most recently at our Historical Pawn Symposium in Naples, is that I spend every day of my life traveling all of the world, trying to leave this industry a better place than I found it!
I have attached a portion of Steve’s commencement speech he gave some time ago. As I heard him say and read these words and witnessed his life, it also gave me inspiration to continue to do what I love to do and to help make this industry a different and a better place than I found it.
I hope you enjoy the read, it’s very inspirational, Steve Jobs – God Bless you and thank you for all that you have given us, you will surely be missed!
Sincerely – Jerry Whitehead
12:01a ET October 7, 2011 (MarketWatch)
BOSTON (MarketWatch) — Are there any life lessons for the rest of us from the career, and legacy, of Steve Jobs?
The death of the Apple co-founder has dominated the news from Cupertino, Calif., to Kuala Lumpur. Many are focusing on the way his products and services changed our world. Others are talking about Jobs, the man.
But this was the most successful business leader of his era, and one of the greats. Few have achieved so much, so quickly, and so publicly. It got me thinking: What are the lessons we can all take away? What do his extraordinary achievements tell the rest of us?
Here are 12 lessons from the life of Jobs:
1. Yes, you can make a difference
Anyone trying to achieve real change — in life, in a company or in any organization — probably feels the urge to give up half a dozen times a day. The naysayers and seat polishers will do everything to slow you down. No one is suggesting that what Apple achieved was the result of Jobs alone, but his career is proof of just how much one individual can change things.
2. You need a vision
It’s not enough to conduct opinion polls and customer surveys, and rely on consultants’ projections. Those are all based on the conventional wisdom and the world as it is today. Jobs imagined things — most obviously the iPod, and the iTunes services — that didn’t yet exist and for which the market was uncertain. While his competitors were still building the products of yesterday, he was imagining, and building, those of tomorrow.
3. It’s not about you
It’s horrifying how many business decisions are still made on the assumption that “well, we have to do something with the XYZ division, so let’s give them this project” or “Buggins has seniority, so he’s in charge.” Do you think the customer cares about Buggins or XYZ? Jobs built Apple into a streamlined operation, focused on the output, nothing else.
4. Focus, focus, focus
Hard to believe, but mediocre managers everywhere like to keep their staff “busy” because they think that’s “productive.” It isn’t. (Ask them what their top priority is, and they’ll name two things. Or four. Or 16.) Apple sure was “busy, busy, busy” when Jobs arrived. And it was going bust. One of the first things he did was ax about 90% of the company’s activities and focus — first on the iMac, then on the iPod.
5. ‘OK’ is not OK
Look at the way Apple’s competitors keep putting out mediocre or unfinished products and thinking they’ll get away with it. Are they for real? The days when you could get by with second best are so over. Jobs was famous for a fanatical perfectionism. It was a core element of Apple’s success.
6. It’s not about the money
Steve Jobs’s life was a thumping rebuttal to all those who are obsessed with cash. The guy had billions: far more than he could ever spend, even if he had lived to 100. Yet he kept working, and striving to achieve greater things. Money? Bah. Something to think about the next time a CEO demands another $20 million a year as an incentive to show up.
7. It ain’t over till it’s over
Fifteen years ago Steve Jobs appeared to be a has-been in Silicon Valley. And Apple was circling the drain: plagued with losses, executive turnover, reorganizations, desperate asset sales and research cuts. Apple’s stock hit a low of $3.23 in 1996, and hardly anyone wanted it even at that price.
8. Give people what they really want
Sounds obvious, right? But most companies don’t do it. They simply produce what they’ve always produced, or what’s comfortable, or what Buggins thinks people want. For years the computer industry churned out ugly, clunky beige products with complicated operating systems. They all did it, and they all assumed that’s what people wanted. Turns out it wasn’t at all.
9. Destroy your own products — before someone else does
Jobs made sure that Apple kept innovating, and rendering its own products obsolete. Creative destruction came from within! That’s why Apple is a $354 billion company, and, say, Palm has vanished from Earth, even though a 2004 iPod is just as out of date as a 2004 Treo. How rare is this? Jobs knew full well that his $500 iPad threatens to cannibalize sales of $1,000 laptops. But he moved forward nonetheless. Most companies wouldn’t.
10. We are all spin doctors now
Critics point out that a lot of what Jobs achieved at Apple was put down to hype and hustle. But that was the point. And Jobs was a master at it — the product teasers, the showmanship on stage, even the black turtlenecks. Truth be told, we live in a superficial age of infinite media. We are all in the spin business. Deal with it.
11. Most people don’t know what they’re doing
It takes nothing away from Steve Jobs to point out that he couldn’t have done it without his competitors. Microsoft, Palm, Nokia, Dell, H-P — the list goes on. They missed opportunities, stayed complacent, failed to innovate and generally mishandled the ways their industries changed. It’s normal to assume that the people around us — and in power — know what they are doing. As Jobs proved, they often don’t.
12. Your time is precious — don’t waste it
Steve Jobs was just 56 when he died — a comparatively young man — and yet during his short spell on Earth he revolutionized the way we live, several times over. What are we doing with our time? It is the resource we waste the most — and it’s the one we cannot buy. Make the most of your short spell on this planet. Make each day and hour count.
Jerry Whitehead
Pawnshop Consulting Group, Inc.
954-540-3697
www.pawnshopconsultinggroup.com
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