| What the other Steve has to say...  Date: December 2007Author: Michele Chandler
 Published at:   www.gsb.stanford.edu
 · · M. Chandler ·Wozniak Reflects on 
                              Founding Apple Computer · ·Steve  Wozniak has been teasing his fans with the promise of an autobiography  for nearly two decades. Finally, he's releasing one in September: IWoz: From Computer Geek to Cult Icon: How I Invented the Personal Computer, Co-Founded Apple, and Had Fun Doing It, which he co-wrote with author and journalist Gina Smith. 
                                  
 
                                
                                                              
                                 Steve Wozniak, 2007
 STANFORD  GRADUATE SCHOOL OF BUSINESS —Passion differentiates people who  successfully develop new companies, says Steve Wozniak who cofounded  Apple Computer in 1976 and went on to revolutionize the computer  industry.
 ”You are not going to be too successful  unless it’s in your heart and is your passion,” Wozniak told a Stanford  Graduate School of Business audience hosted by the student Entrepreneur  Club. “You want to be the sort of person who can create a company, who  can develop a product and service, and then take it to another level.”
 
 To get startups through their often-lean early years, leaders also need  to be multiskilled and have complementary strengths, Wozniak said. He  cited the example of Apple cofounder Steve Jobs, now the  Cupertino-based company’s CEO. Back in the 1970s, Wozniak had designed  a computer for his own use, and Jobs saw potential in selling similar  ready-made machines in the broader marketplace.
 
 Even back then, Jobs “wanted to be one of the great people. He had this  vision of making companies. He always had the drive and focus,” Wozniak  told the group. “Me? I just wanted to build the best computer possible.  So it was the ideal team—because what I could do he couldn’t do, and  vice versa.”
 
 In 1980 Apple went public, transforming both Wozniak and Jobs into multimillionaires.
 
 Wozniak said that he believes what made Apple successful in comparison  to many other startups of the time was that “we had the right people in  the right places.” “Steve and I were in our young 20s. We had no  business experience, no business schooling, and no money.” But they did  have “a little bit of fortunate guidance from outside people who had  been successful,’’ Wozniak recalled. Among those was Armas Markkula,  the venture capitalist who provided the pair with seed money,  credibility, and business savvy.
 
 Garth Saloner, Skoll professor of Electronic Commerce, Strategic  management, and Economics and codirector of the school's Center for  Entrepreneurial Studies, told Wozniak that while many business school  students aspire to create their own companies, they lack critical  technology backgrounds. Saloner asked Wozniak: "From the technologist's  perspective, is there value in having a partner on the business side?"
 
 "It's absolutely critical," Wozniak responded. "I totally admire the  business people. I would not want to be one because…I don't want to be  political and direct other people and step on toes and run companies.  So, I decided I'd just be an engineer at the lab, hooking up wires and  doing that for all my life.."
 
 It’s not easy for startups to find engineers with both broad expertise and passion for their work, said Wozniak.
 
 ”One out of 10 engineers out there are artists. They’re artists because  every little piece has to be perfect. They are prouder of what they did  than anything the masses would do. But they are good at taking pieces  of chemistry, putting things together, and creating things,” Wozniak  said.
 ”It’s best if you can find an engineer who can cover a lot of the  disciplines and not divide it down into one guy will do this design,  one guy will draw on paper, one guy will write the manual, another will  actually design, another will build it, and yet another guy will test  it,” he said. “If you can’t get that down to one person it’s very  difficult in a startup situation.”
 
 Saying he didn’t want his business success to change him, Wozniak  recalled important periods in his life: teaching fifth grade students  for eight years and how he built his own Ham radio when he was in the  fifth grade.
 
 And he talked about having amnesia in the aftermath of surviving the  crash of his small plane during takeoff from Santa Cruz Sky Park in  1981. After he recovered, Wozniak said, “I called Steve [Jobs] and  said. ‘I’m going to go back to school now.’ Apple was large enough with  a lot of engineers and able to run and get the projects designed and  built and introduced to the marketplace without one of the key  engineers being there.” In 1986, Wozniak finished his undergraduate  degree in electrical engineering and computer sciences at University of  California, Berkeley. He said he enrolled under the alias “Rocky  Raccoon Clark.”
 
 Today he continues to connect with young entrepreneurs. “I try to find  young people who remind me of Steve Jobs and me when we were starting,  and I try to get involved with them and help them out with their  startups, their companies, their directions,” Wozniak said. “I love  being around those things, not the big huge public company realms. My  friends are interesting technical people working on neat little things.  Sometimes, they are a little bit on the hacker side, but they’re the  interesting people in the world. They’re the ones you’ll see movies  about.”
 
 The speaker series, known as Start Me Up, was developed by the  Entrepreneur Club to give students the opportunity to learn about  entrepreneurship from high-profile company founders and CEOs.
 
                                   Michele Chandler  |