Extracted from The Innovation Sweet Spot
In 1984, Steve Jobs introduced the Macintosh to the world. At that time, according to the U.S. Census Bureau, only 8.2% of American households had computers. Jobs wanted to see a computer in every home. The Mac was designed to be “everyone’s computer”….not just a tool for scientists and tech types. While the first generation Mac had some drawbacks, it eventually took off — along with its wildly popular sibling products. In September of this year, Apple’s market capitalization was $624 Billion – worth more than all the listed companies in Portugal, Ireland, Greece, and Spain combined.
The greatest ideas are not necessarily created by sitting around and
In 1984, Steve Jobs introduced the Macintosh to the world. At that time, according to the U.S. Census Bureau, only 8.2% of American households had computers. Jobs wanted to see a computer in every home. The Mac was designed to be “everyone’s computer”….not just a tool for scientists and tech types. While the first generation Mac had some drawbacks, it eventually took off — along with its wildly popular sibling products. In September of this year, Apple’s market capitalization was $624 Billion – worth more than all the listed companies in Portugal, Ireland, Greece, and Spain combined.
The greatest ideas are not necessarily created by sitting around and
brainstorming new inventions the world needs, but are derived from unmet
needs in your own life that are likely shared by others…
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