Organization
Organization

Stanford University

3 Books4 Highlights48 Themes

Stanford University appears across 3 books, with 4 highlights.

Books

Notes

Most coverage

Steve Jobs' Chef (translated) has the strongest coverage in these notes.

Recurring themes

Name as Destiny Declaration, Buy Distressed, Build Permanent Ensembles, Zero Is Better Than a Negative

Start here

I didn’t see it then, but it turned out that getting fired from Apple was the best thing that could have ever happened to me. The heaviness of being successful was replaced by the lightness of being a beginner again, le…

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Answers use only the 3 books and 4 highlights on this page.

Highlights

"I didn’t see it then, but it turned out that getting fired from Apple was the best thing that could have ever happened to me. The heaviness of being successful was replaced by the lightness of being a beginner again, less sure about everything. It freed me to enter one of the most creative periods of my life. Steve Jobs, Stanford University commencement address, June 12, 2005"

Steve Jobs in Exile

"Many of the deals I made were built on the camaraderie of friendships within the industry. When Heritage Communications was the nation’s tenth-largest cable company, it was still run by James M. Hoak Jr., the man who had played a key role in the deal over a decade earlier that created two classes of stock for TCI. Hoak was a Midwesterner who had graduated Yale, interned at the FCC in 1968, graduated from Stanford University’s law school, and started a cable company—at twenty-six years old."

Born to Be Wired

"Toshizu Sushi-ya and the Internet This is how the new sushi restaurant managed by the two of us, “Toshizu Sushi-ya,” opened in September 1994. We shifted from a partnership to our own restaurant, with a renewed determination to serve even tastier sushi (Photo 3-1, Photo 3-2). In the end, the wall color, which was a major issue for us, was not repainted and remains the same with another sushi restaurant now occupying the space. However, its location near Stanford University and facing the main street was suitable for a dining establishment."

Steve Jobs' Chef (translated)

"(We should find someone influential with Stanford University, which owns the hotel, and get their support). By researching Stanford affiliates and focusing on whether any customers in the shop might turn out to be supporters, a candidate was found before long."

Steve Jobs' Chef (translated)

Themes

Name as Destiny DeclarationBuy Distressed, Build Permanent EnsemblesZero Is Better Than a NegativeEvangelize or Die CultureEat the Loss to LaunchChampagne Taste as Strategic InvestmentMercedes Not Volkswagen DoctrineRelentless Pursuit Until PermissionPoach the Inner Circle, Then Forge in FireThe Milkman DefenseCorporate Anthropology Before BuildingNobel Laureate Origin Myth as LaunchpadRadical Transparency to Kill PoliticsZen Minimalism Into Physical FormLawsuit Spotlight as Free MarketingMystery as Brand DeploymentEquity Stakes for Distribution LeverageCableLabs Royalty-Free Standards PlayStock Architecture to Lock ControlBlackout as Franchise LeverageTax-Sheltered Growing AnnuityInsurance Company Capital Over BanksNever Bet the Whole FarmWarrants as Industry Coordination CurrencyEmpathy as Negotiation ArchitectureThrow the Keys on the TableOwn a Small Piece of a Winner You Can't RunDecentralized Cowboys with Centralized BenchmarksWhat If Not as Decision FilterScale Economics as Survival DoctrineAsk One Sharp Question to Crack Open IntelCash Flow Not Earnings as CurrencyBuy the System, Pay With Its Own Cash FlowIntrovert's Edge Through ListeningCalifornia Sky EntrepreneurshipNever Judge Wealth by AppearanceUpgrade the Stage, Keep the Craft PurePartner Who Covers Your Blind SpotCounter as Fixed-Point ObservatoryHideout Prestige Over Visible LocationSeating Diplomacy as Silent ServiceBootstrap Through Regulars, Not LocationEarly IT Adoption for Analog BusinessCelebrity Treated as Regular CustomerCombine Experience With TheoryPaper Napkin Ideas Over BoardroomsKunto: Invisible Influence Over TimeObsession Follows Admiration