Entity Dossier
Person

Wells

Strategic Concepts & Mechanics

Signature MoveMidnight Shift Yield ObsessionStrategic PatternSemiconductor Optimism as Naming PhilosophyIdentity & CultureWartime Childhood as Resilience TrainingRisk DoctrineStaff Up Before the BreakthroughCornerstone MoveFury-Driven Reverse Logic at CrossroadsSignature MoveHarvard Feast Carried EverywhereCompetitive AdvantageInsider Management at Every LevelStrategic PatternTechnological Inflection Points Level the FieldOperating PrincipleSolitude and Classical Music as Thinking FuelIdentity & CultureFailure Never Accepted, Setbacks UnderstoodSignature MovePublish Papers to Build StandingSignature MoveEnvironment Over Individual TalentCornerstone MoveProcess-Level Problem Solving on the Factory FloorCornerstone MoveSelf-Teach Past Every GatekeeperOperating PrincipleDenial as Quality ControlIdentity & CulturePrincipal or Employee, No Middle GroundSignature MoveInstinct Over Data as Decision DoctrineCornerstone MoveOne Dumb Step Then Course-Correct at SpeedOperating PrincipleCreative Conflict as Decision EngineDecision FrameworkSerendipity as Career Navigation SystemCornerstone MoveControl Hardwired or Walk AwaySignature MoveHire Sparky Blank Slates Over Credentialed VeteransCompetitive AdvantageContrarian Counterprogramming as Market EntryStrategic PatternScreens as Interactive Commerce SurfacesCornerstone MoveSeize Mismanaged Clay and Sculpt ItCapital StrategyCash the Lucky Check ImmediatelySignature MoveMaterial First, Never the PackageIdentity & CultureFearlessness Borrowed from Greater TerrorOperating PrincipleDrill to Molecular Understanding Before ActingSignature MoveSpin Out What You Build, Never Hoard ScaleSignature MoveTorture the Process Until Truth Rings

Primary Evidence

"In that one year at Harvard, the amount and breadth of my reading were something I never again matched later. I read Hemingway, Fitzgerald, Galsworthy, Sinclair Lewis, Jane Austen, Shakespeare, and Shaw; Churchill’s memoirs of World War II; famous speeches by modern American presidents; American history; Wells’s world history; several English books about China; and I also ventured into a few classical giants such as Gibbon’s The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, Adam Smith’s The Wealth of Nations, and even Marx’s Capital. Besides these major works, I subscribed to two newspapers, The New York Times and The Christian Science Monitor published in Boston, as well as Time magazine."

Source:Autobiography of Morris Chang: Volume 1, 1931-1964

"Ultimately, Wells graciously agreed to be president, but those complications were what had kept it all up in the air—and kept Michael unreachable. He didn’t want to risk his one firm job offer by telling me he was after the Disney job. I was at home on a Sunday morning when Warren Beatty called to say that Michael was going to Disney. The pieces in the disappearing puzzle of Michael now fit. Shortly thereafter Michael called me from his car to say that he’d just left the Disney board meeting and it was going to be announced that he was its new CEO. I was angry that he hadn’t told me the truth about his maneuverings, and I was terribly disappointed that he wasn’t coming with me to Fox, but of course he was right to take the Disney job. Even though Disney was a much smaller operation at that time and had been moribund in the last few years, it was also an extraordinary opportunity and Michael was right to do it. And what a beyond-spectacular success he was to make of it."

Source:Who Knew

Appears In Volumes