I think that Jobs, later on (after he re-joined Apple), was just a great manager. This meant he considered a whole lot of decisions and arguments, and generally made smart decisions upon reflection.
I think he (and other CEOs) are wildly inaccurate with how they portray themselves to the public. However, I think they can have great decision making in company-internal decisions. It’s a weird, advantageous, inconsistency.
I think that Jobs, later on (after he re-joined Apple), was just a great manager. This meant he considered a whole lot of decisions and arguments, and generally made smart decisions upon reflection.
I think he (and other CEOs) are wildly inaccurate with how they portray themselves to the public. However, I think they can have great decision making in company-internal decisions. It’s a weird, advantageous, inconsistency.
This book goes into some detail:
https://www.amazon.com/Becoming-Steve-Jobs-Evolution-Visionary-ebook/dp/B00N6PCWY8/ref=sr_1_3?keywords=steve+jobs&qid=1636131865&rnid=2941120011&s=books&sr=1-3