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The most underrated operational mind in business history:
Andy Grove
Before you read anything further, do you know who he is? Just curious ...
He took Intel from a failing memory chip company to the most dominant processor company on Earth.
Here are 6 principles he operated by that most leaders today ignore:
1 - "Only the paranoid survive" wasn't about fear, it was about building systems that detect threats before they become crises.
2- He measured output, not activity. If a meeting didn't produce a decision, it didn't happen.
3- He killed Intel's own profitable product line (memory chips) because the data said the market was shifting. Most leaders can't kill what's working because they don't want to take on the risk.
4- He ran Intel on OKRs before anyone called them OKRs, clear objectives, measurable results, no ambiguity.
5- He believed managers exist to remove obstacles, not to inspire. His job was to make the system work, not to give speeches.
6- He documented everything. Decisions, rationale, expected outcomes. If it wasn't written down, it wasn't a decision.
Most leaders today would call this rigid, Intel called it a 4,500% stock increase.
What principle from this list would break your current operation if you actually enforced it?

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