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    vince lombardi

    Explore " vince lombardi" with insightful episodes like "#282 Jeff Bezos Shareholder Letters", "#281 Working with Steve Jobs" and "#56 The Biography of Herb Kelleher" from podcasts like ""Founders", "Founders" and "Founders"" and more!

    Episodes (3)

    #282 Jeff Bezos Shareholder Letters

    #282 Jeff Bezos Shareholder Letters

    What I learned from rereading Jeff Bezos' Shareholder Letters (for the 3rd time!) 

    Read Jeff's letters in book form: Invent and Wander: The Collected Writings of Jeff Bezos or for free online: Amazon Investor Relations

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    [2:30] Amazon hopes to create an enduring franchise

    [3:00] Because of our emphasis on the long term, we may make decisions and weigh trade-offs differently than some companies.

    [4:00] We will continue to focus relentlessly on our customers.

    [4:00] We will work hard to spend wisely and maintain our lean culture. We understand the importance of continually reinforcing a cost-conscious culture.

    [4:00] We set out to offer customers something they simply could not get any other way.

    [5:00] Word of mouth remains the most powerful customer acquisition tool that we have.

    [5:00] We are working to build something important, something that matters to our customers, something that we can all tell our grandchildren about. Such things aren't meant to be easy.

    [6:00] "To read Bezos’ shareholder letters is to get a crash course in running a high-growth internet business from someone who mastered it before any of the playbooks were written." — From CB Insights

    [7:00] Common themes repeated in Jeff’s letters:

    More innovation is ahead of us.

    It is still early. The opportunity —if we execute well — is enormous.

    We will move quickly.

    We will endure. Amazon will be a durable, long-lasting company.

    We will focus on cash flow.

    Once in a lifetime opportunities will be risky. Jeff gave himself a 30% chance of success— at best.

    Customer obsession is our North Star. It is what we will bet the company on.

    We will be BOLD.

    We will have a frugal, lean culture that Sam Walton would approve of.

    This will be hard. All valuable things are.

    We will have to learn along the way.

    [8:00] Sam Walton: Made In America by Sam Walton. (Founders #234)

    [11:00] I would love to ask Jeff the question, “If you could only have one word to describe you on your tombstone, what would it be?” My guess is he would pick “relentless.”

    [16:00] We believe we have reached a "tipping  point," where this platform allows us to launch new ecommerce businesses faster, with a higher quality of customer experience, a lower incremental cost, a higher chance of success, and a faster path to scale and profitability than any other company. (A company that builds companies)

    [17:00] Made in Japan: Akio Morita and Sony by Akio Morita. (Founders #102)

    [19:00] We will continue to invest heavily in introductions to new customers. Though it's sometimes hard to imagine with all that has happened in the last five years, this remains Day 1 for ecommerce, and these are the early days of category formation where many customers are forming relationships for the first time. We must work hard to grow the number of customers who shop with us. (He was right about this — what is the lifetime value of an Amazon customer over 17 years?)

    [21:00] To us, operational excellence implies two things: delivering continuous improvement in customer experience and driving productivity, margin, efficiency, and asset velocity across all our businesses.

    Often, the best way to drive one of these is to deliver the other.

    For instance, more efficient distribution yields faster delivery times, which in turn lowers contacts per order and customer service costs. These, in turn, improve customer experience and build brand, which in turn decreases customer acquisition and retention costs.

    [22:00] Creative Selection: Inside Apple's Design Process During the Golden Age of Steve Jobs by Ken Kocienda (Founders #281)

    [24:00] Jeff Bezos on The Electricity Metaphor for the Web's Future

    [27:00] Repeat this loop: Focus on cost improvement makes it possible for us to afford to lower prices, which drives growth. Growth spreads fixed costs across more sales, reducing cost per unit, which makes possible more price reductions. Customers like this, and it's good for shareholders. Please expect us to repeat this loop.

    [29:00] The Everything Store: Jeff Bezos and the Age of Amazon by Brad Stone. (Founders #179)

    [35:00] My Life and Work by Henry Ford. (Founders #266)

    [40:00] Jeff Bezos is unapologetically extreme. He is already the best and still wants to be better.

    [41:00] This part is incredible— on the need for good judgement and why data may lead you to make the wrong decision:

    Our quantitative understanding of elasticity is short-term. We can estimate what a price reduction will do this week and this quarter. But we cannot numerically estimate the effect that consistently lowering prices will have on our business over five years or ten years or more. Our judgment is that relentlessly returning efficiency improvements and scale economies to customers in the form of lower prices creates a virtuous cycle that leads over the long term to a much larger dollar amount of free cash flow, and thereby to a much more valuable Amazon.

    [43:00] Don’t build an undifferentiated commodity business. — Zero to One: Notes on Startups, or How to Build the Future by Peter Thiel. (Founders #278)

    [44:00] Differentiation is survival.

    [49:00] Missionaries build better products.

    [50:00] Long-term thinking levers our existing abilities and lets us do new things we couldn't otherwise contemplate. It supports the failure and iteration required for invention, and it frees us to pioneer in unexplored spaces. Seek instant gratification-or the elusive promise of it-and chances are you'll find a crowd there ahead of you. Long-term orientation interacts well with customer obsession. If we can identify a customer need and if we can further develop conviction that that need is meaningful and durable, our approach permits us to work patiently for multiple years to deliver a solution.

    [52:00] Problems are just opportunities in work clothes.

    [53:00] Similar idea said two different ways:

    Jeff Bezos: The financial results for 2009 reflect the cumulative efforts of 15 years of customer experience improvements.

    Peter Thiel: If you focus on near-term growth above all else, you miss the most important question you should be asking: will this business still be around a decade from now?

    [55:00] The most radical and transformative of inventions are often those that empower others to unleash their creativity—to pursue their dreams.

    [57:00] A dreamy business offering has at least four characteristics.

    —Customers love it

    —It can grow to very large size

    —It has strong returns on capital

    —It's durable in time-with the potential to endure for decades.

    When you find one of these get married.

    [1:03:00] Be a yardstick of quality. Some people aren't used to an environment where excellence is expected. — Inside Steve’s Brain by Leander Kahney. (Founders #204)

    [1:03:00] I believe high standards are teachable. High standards are contagious.  —Jeff Bezos

    [1:04:00] Leaders have relentlessly high standards. Many people may think these standards are unreasonably high.

    [1:07:00] The key point here is that you can improve results through the simple act of teaching scope-that a great memo probably should take a week or more.

    [1:10:00] Differentiation is Survival and the Universe Wants You to be Typical

    In what ways does the world pull at you in an attempt to make you normal?

    How much work does it take to maintain your distinctiveness?

    To keep alive the thing or things that make you special?

    We all know that distinctiveness – originality – is valuable.

    What I’m asking you to do is to embrace how much energy it takes to maintain that distinctiveness.

    The world wants you to be typical – in a thousand ways, it pulls at you.

    Don’t let it happen.

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    I have listened to every episode released and look forward to every episode that comes out. The only criticism I would have is that after each podcast I usually want to buy the book because I am interested so my poor wallet suffers. ” — Gareth

    Be like Gareth. Buy a book: All the books featured on Founders Podcast

    #281 Working with Steve Jobs

    #281 Working with Steve Jobs

    What I learned from rereading Creative Selection: Inside Apple's Design Process During the Golden Age of Steve Jobs by Ken Kocienda.

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    Get access to the World’s Most Valuable Notebook for Founders by investing in a subscription to Founders Notes

    ----

    Follow one of my favorite podcasts Invest Like The Best  

    [2:01] We're going to relentlessly chase perfection, knowing full well we will not catch it, because perfection is not attainable. But we are going to relentlessly chase it because, in the process, we will catch excellence.

    [2:01] I'm not remotely interested in being just good.

    [3:00] Gentlemen, this is the most important play we have. It's the play we must make go. It's the play that we will make go. It's the play that we will run again, and again, and again.

    [4:00] In any complex effort, communicating a well-articulated vision for what you're trying to do is the starting point for figuring out how to do it.

    [4:00] A significant part of attaining excellence in any field is closing the gap between the accidental and intentional, to achieve not just a something, or even an everything, but a specific and well-chosen thing.

    [6:00] Every day at Apple was like going to school, a design-focused, high-tech, product-creation university.

    [8:00] A story about Steve’s clarity of thought.

    [9:00] Although Steve's opinions and moods could be hard to anticipate, he was utterly predictable when it came to his passion for products. He wanted Apple products to be great.

    [11:00] The decisiveness of Steve Jobs.

    [16:00] Steve wasn't merely interested in paying lip service to this goal. He demanded action. Steve found the time to attend a demo review so he could see it. His involvement kept the progress and momentum going.

    [17:00] Put yourself in your customer’s shoes. Hack away the unessential.

    [17:00] People do not care about your product as much as you do. You have to make it simple and easy to use right from the start.

    [18:00] Steve Jobs believed that stripping away nonessential features made products easier for people to learn from the start and easier to use over time.

    [19:00] Insanely Simple: The Obsession That Drives Apple's Success by Ken Segall

    [22:00] Don’t rest on your laurels. Steve said: “I think if you do something and it turns out pretty good, then you should go do something else wonderful, not dwell on it for too long. Just figure out what's next.”

    [24:00] The sooner we started making creative decisions the more time there was to refine and improve those decisions. (The sooner you start the more time you will have to get it right.)

    [26:00] The simple transaction of buying a song, and of handing over a credit card number to Apple in order to so, became part of what Steve had begun calling “the Apple experience." As a great marketer, Steve understood that every interaction a customer had with Apple could increase or decrease his or her respect for the company. As he put it, a corporation "could accumulate or withdraw credits" from its reputation, which is why he worked so hard to ensure that every single interaction a customer might have with Apple-from using a Mac to calling customer support to buying a single from the iTunes store and then getting billed for it-was excellent. —— Becoming Steve Jobs: The Evolution of a Reckless Upstart into a Visionary Leader by Brent Schlender and Rick Tetzeli (Founders #265)

    [29:00] Studying great work from the past provides the means of comparison and contrast and lets us tap into the collective creativity of previous generations. The past is a source of the timeless and enduring.

    [29:00] Design is how it works. —Steve Jobs

    [31:00] Hackers and Painters by Paul Graham (Founders #275, 276, 277)

    [34:00] Jony Ive: The Genius Behind Apple's Greatest Products by Leander Kahney. (Founders #178)

    [37:00] Our clarity of purpose kept us on track.

    [38:00] Concentrating keenly on what to do helped us block out what not to do.

    [40:00] Steve Jobs on the importance of working at the intersection of liberal arts and technology:

    “The reason that Apple is able to create products like the iPad is because we've always tried to be at the intersection of technology and liberal arts, to be able to get the best of both, to make extremely advanced products from a technology point of view, but also have them be intuitive, easy to use, fun to use, so that they really fit the users. The users don't have to come to them, they come to the user.”

    [42:00] Steve Jobs provided his single-minded focus on making great products, and his vision motivated me.

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    Get access to the World’s Most Valuable Notebook for Founders by investing in a subscription to Founders Notes

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    I have listened to every episode released and look forward to every episode that comes out. The only criticism I would have is that after each podcast I usually want to buy the book because I am interested so my poor wallet suffers. ” — Gareth

    Be like Gareth. Buy a book: All the books featured on Founders Podcast

    #56 The Biography of Herb Kelleher

    #56 The Biography of Herb Kelleher

    What I learned from reading Nuts!: Southwest Airlines' Crazy Recipe for Business and Personal Success

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    Reality is chaotic; planning is ordered [0:01]

    Vince Lombardi is the Steve Jobs of coaches [3:48] 

    how Southwest Airlines is different [11:31]

    the beginning of Southwest [16:00]

    fighting anticompetitive practice [24:30] 

    finding a new market by doing the opposite of your competition [29:00] 

    missionaries make the best products [31:00]

    being forced to innovate leads to questioning assumptions which leads to finding new markets [34:00]

    how Southwest became the largest liquor distributor in Texas [38:00] 

    remember your fundamental reason for being and don't deviate from that [40:45]

    optimize for profits, not market share [42:30]

    know what you are competing with - not who [44:15] 

    how having only one type of airplane gives Southwest an advantage [46:30] 

    how keeping it simple saved Southwest $2 million [51:30]

    know what you do best - have the discipline to stick to it [53:00] 

    if you are going to be small you have to be fast [1:01:19]

    the benefits of curiosity are unpredictable [1:03:45]

    I have listened to every episode released and look forward to every episode that comes out. The only criticism I would have is that after each podcast I usually want to buy the book because I am interested so my poor wallet suffers. ” — Gareth

    Be like Gareth. Buy a book: All the books featured on Founders Podcast