22 Random Quotes From Adam Lashinsky
![]() |
22 Random Quotes From Adam Lashinskye |
Cannibalization is by far the most difficult feat any established, successful company can pull off.
— Adam Lashinsky
What to do with a leading business that's challenged by a new technology wave without hurting an existing profit stream? The single greatest example of recent memory is Apple's willingness to decimate iPod sales by incorporating all the category-defining product's features into a new gizmo, the iPhone.
— Adam Lashinsky
The iPod was once so important to Apple that the estimable journalist Steven Levy wrote an entire book about it. And then, poof! The iPod was nearly gone.
— Adam Lashinsky
The reliable way great conglomerates grew over time was by adding new products and buying new companies. IBM moved from mainframe to PCs.
— Adam Lashinsky
Broadcom is the descendent of a nearly 60-year-old unit of the original Hewlett-Packard. Semiconductor companies are like enterprise software companies: they don't die easily.
— Adam Lashinsky
The cloud, for a while more of a metaphor than a giant business, is re-ordering all sorts of industries.
— Adam Lashinsky
A 'free and open' Internet has been an article of faith in and around Mountain View, Menlo Park, and its environs for two decades.
— Adam Lashinsky
Tesla has humiliated established carmakers with its brilliant vision. But Detroit, Turin, Stuttgart, and so on have understood scale as well as capital allocation for decades. Such gargantuan tasks could yet humiliate Tesla.
— Adam Lashinsky
Amazon has suffered quarters-long profit droughts. Alphabet has given its investors agita over profligate spending on non-core products. Microsoft's growth - if not its profit engine - stalled for years, causing its stock to idle, too.
— Adam Lashinsky
Amazon is pursuing something called Amazon Key, which lets its couriers unlock Prime customers' doors and deliver packages. It's pairing the service, which it plans to make available in 37 cities next month, with a camera so users will have intelligence inside and outside their homes, presumably boosting trust and lowering creepiness.
— Adam Lashinsky
Amazon has a good record with customers, who are confident the retailer will give them the lowest price. Entering their home will be another thing altogether.
— Adam Lashinsky
Amazon led with online bookselling, web services, and drones.
— Adam Lashinsky
Groceries, TV shows, and shoes are a few categories Amazon has been willing to hang onto for years.
— Adam Lashinsky
ICG became a dot-com joke, a one-stock example of extreme hubris on the part of its management and the investment bankers and sell-side analysts who embarrassed themselves by pumping it up.
— Adam Lashinsky
ICG wasn't an index fund so much as a collection of venture-capital investments focused on so-called business-to-business Internet companies.
— Adam Lashinsky
Innovation, like creativity, is an amorphous concept. It's the holy grail of business, but achieving it - even merely explaining it - is lightning-in-a-bottle difficult.
— Adam Lashinsky
Innovation has its limits, of course, and Salesforce has proved adept at supplementing its growth with acquisitions, a tool long available to older rivals like Oracle and SAP.
— Adam Lashinsky
Salesforce acquires companies - it has snapped up 55 since 2006 - that are either more innovative or that have pioneered market segments that Salesforce hasn't yet cracked.
— Adam Lashinsky
Salesforce employees are so immersed in the fervor over their offerings and their unique workplace that they are nearly incredulous to learn that few people beyond the legions of customers using Salesforce's product have the faintest idea what the company does.
— Adam Lashinsky
Facebook can spend and talk endlessly to defend itself so long as it keeps printing money.
— Adam Lashinsky
I stopped using AIM years ago - I can't remember exactly when - and so its demise shouldn't mean much to me.
— Adam Lashinsky
I confess that, like public figures from bygone days or an entertainer that hadn't been heard from in eons, I didn't know AIM, as we all called it, still existed at all.
— Adam Lashinsky
This article was written with the help of JARVIS. Use this tool to save time. Join this and get free 10,000 credits.
Medium profile: @abhijitxp01
Join the conversation