Thursday, September 13, 2007

Egonomics and Steve Jobs

I came across this book Egonomics on Amazon (well actually Amazon recommended it to me and I'm not sure how I feel about that... ;), and on the Amazon page there is an interview with one of the authors, Steven Smith, done by Guy Kawasaki. One of Guy's questions is: "What is your analysis of Steve Jobs?" in terms of ego.

His response:

Answer: Steve’s gone through a metamorphosis in how he works. He’s always been exceptionally gifted as a creator and designer, but he used those gifts in a way that drove people away from his company and minimized the talent and creative IQ of the people around him. Once he was kicked out of Apple, life began to humble him through his own health challenges, his reputation, losing what he created, etc. Interestingly, Steve came out of that time of his life with a healthier ego, because life had humbled him and he accepted the lessons.

At his commencement speech at Stanford a couple of years ago he said, “I’m pretty sure none of this [NeXT, Pixar, his return to Apple, the iPod and iTunes] would have happened if I hadn’t been fired from Apple. It was awful tasting medicine, but I guess the patient needed it.”

Humility is a powerful antidote to unhealthy ego, and we can either humble ourselves, or wait for life to humble us. There was a Fortune cover about one year ago that had Steve on the cover, but the two-page spread inside had six or seven people sitting next to him. We thought that picture said it all; he’s no longer in this by himself, and it appears that he recognizes that. As a result, he’s a much better leader.

I've bolded the sentence in the second paragraph that really sparked my interest. Sometimes you need to get kicked while you're down to really look at yourself and what's going on around you. When you've got nothing to lose, it's easier to take bigger risks and make major changes in in your life.

Tuesday, September 11, 2007

Electronic Signatures are Here

Middlepost Docs is now open to the public and comes with a lot of new stuff. Of course you can send a document and get it signed in minutes as you could with the beta, but now there are also Forms! MP Docs has an easy to use form editor so you can make forms really easily and then reuse that form over and over again without having to edit the document. Think Adobe Acrobat PDF Forms, but:
  • no huge price tag, free with your subscription
  • all web based, in your browser so no extra software required
  • no emailing files around
  • and it's stored for 7 years.
You just send it to whoever you want, they can fill in their info (just as if it were a paper form) and then sign it. All online! You seriously have to try it out to see how productive it is.

Go to www.middlepost.com and sign up for a free trial.

Here's what a form looks like when you send it to someone: