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The Original Macintosh:    81 of 127 
How to Hire Insanely Great Employees
Author: Tom Zito
Date: September 1983
Characters: Steve Jobs
Topics: Apple Spirit, Management, Recruiting
Summary: Steve gives the troops a pep talk

I first met Steve Jobs in 1978 when, as a reporter for The Washington Post, I had come to the Valley to cover the technology business. Steve not only charmed me into writing a profile about him (and a year later, a cover story for Newsweek), but also charmed me into an Apple II and out of a $2,500 check to pay for it -- which at the time was more than a month's salary for me. I found the thing fairly useless, other than as an expression of how great Steve was as a salesman. A decent word processing program (not to mention VisiCalc) had yet to be written, and I wound up justifying the investment by teaching myself Basic.



By 1983 I was working on a book about the birth of the personal computer industry, and Steve had granted me carte blanche to wander around Bandley 3 and stay current on the Mac's development. One day in September, in a conference room populated with about 25 members of the Mac team, Steve was lecturing on how to hire.

"A players hire A players," he said. "B players hire C players. Do you get it?"

Apparently not. Somebody in the back of the room raised his hand and asked, "so how do you hire more B players?"

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9 Comments     
Actually, I've always wanted to ask Steve how B players got hired to begin with.
I think A players decay into B players eventually.
Unless you give them lots of coffee to maintain their energy state.
How about that B players are rarely been hired.
If B players are rarely hired, then C players are also rarely hired and both are swamped by self-replicating A players.
Some C players improve and become B players, who then sympathetically hire more C players.
Here's Guy Kawasaki's response - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DR_wX0EwOMM&t=31m9s
one of my most favorite quote
How do you hire D players?