Bookmark: Steve jobs adopted a no ‘bozos’ policy and said the best managers are those who never wanted the job—Here are his 3 best management tips
Discover Steve Jobs' top three management tips that emphasize talent, passion-driven leadership, and building a community of excellence for innovation.
Steve Jobs imparted crucial management wisdom through three key pieces of advice, pivotal in shaping effective business leadership. At the forefront was his unapologetic imposition of a ’no bozos’ policy, emphasizing the hiring of only exceptionally talented individuals who align with the organization’s innovative goals. Jobs underscored that the most effective managers were often those who neither sought nor aspired to the managerial role. Instead, they were driven by a profound passion for their work and an intrinsic motivation to excel, which naturally positioned them as leaders. His managerial philosophy extended beyond conventional ambition, advocating for leaders who prioritize product and team excellence over personal advancement. Furthermore, Jobs’ philosophy revolved around assembling not just a team but a ‘community of excellence’ that could innovate collaboratively. This community-centric leadership approach sparked an environment of trust and creativity, hallmarks of Jobs’ managerial legacy that profoundly transformed Apple’s culture. By leveraging these core principles, Jobs demonstrated that leadership extends beyond traditional roles, focusing on nurturing talent and fostering environments conducive to groundbreaking innovations. His management strategies remain influential, stressing that talent, passion-driven leadership, and a commitment to excellence are indispensable in driving organizational success in any tech-forward era.
The agent-shaped org chart
Every real org has the same topology: principal, role-holder, specialists. Staff AI maps onto it, node for node, and the cost collapse shows up in the deliverables that were always just human-handoff overhead.
AI as staff, not software
Two frames for what AI is doing to work. The tool frame makes tools smarter. The staff frame makes roles unnecessary. Those aren't the same product, the same company, or the same industry.
Knowledge work was never work
Knowledge work was always coordination between humans who couldn't share state directly. The artifacts were never the work. They were the overhead — and AI just made the overhead optional.
The work of being available now
A book on AI, judgment, and staying human at work.
The practice of work in progress
Practical essays on how work actually gets done.
How do I get my dev team to adopt AI?
A stub on helping mixed-interest development teams find their own useful ways into AI.
Want to learn about agents? Talk to someone who ran an agency.
I spent 20 years running consulting engagements at Fortune 500 companies. Turns out that's the best preparation for running a fleet of AI agents ... because the problems are identical.
Your AI agents need a water cooler
We run a twelve-session AI fleet that coordinates through an IRC breakroom. A friend asked: why are you making AI agents act like humans? The answer turned out to be more interesting than the question.
Bookmark: Nearly all bosses are ‘accidental’ with no formal training— and research shows it’s leading 1 in 3 workers to quit
Untrained managers drive one in three employees to quit. Discover how effective leadership training can boost retention and workplace satisfaction.
Santander’s new office mandate: Shifting from flexible wfh to structured office attendance
Santander shifts from flexible work-from-home to mandatory in-office attendance, emphasizing development and productivity for early-career staff.
Article analysis: ‘Every job is going to change pretty radically,’ many in the next year, thanks to AI, says indeed’s CEO
Discover how AI will radically transform jobs in the coming year, as Indeed's CEO shares insights on hiring, skills, and the future of work.