The Lean Startup: How Eric Ries Changed Business Forever

What This Book Teaches “The Lean Startup” fundamentally changed how entrepreneurs think about building companies. Rather than following traditional business planning, Ries advocates for treating every business idea as a scientific experiment. The core methodology centers on the Build-Measure-Learn feedback loop, where entrepreneurs quickly build minimum viable products (MVPs), measure customer response, and learn from real data rather than assumptions. The book demonstrates this approach through compelling case studies. Dropbox, for instance, didn’t build their entire file-sharing platform first—they created a simple video demonstrating the concept to gauge customer interest.

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The Innovators: How Teams, Not Lone Geniuses, Built Digital Age

What This Book Reveals ‘The Innovators’ presents a compelling counter-narrative to Silicon Valley’s cult of the individual genius. Isaacson, known for his biographies of Steve Jobs and Albert Einstein, spent years researching how major technological breakthroughs actually occurred. His findings challenge the popular image of innovation as the product of isolated brilliance. The book spans over 150 years of technological development, from Charles Babbage’s Analytical Engine in the 1840s to the rise of Google and Facebook.

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Steve Wozniak's Untold Story: How Generosity Built Apple

What Happened Farnam Street released a detailed podcast episode examining Steve Wozniak’s biography “iWoz” and his pivotal role in Apple’s early success. The episode reveals how Wozniak single-handedly designed Apple’s first computers while working nights at his apartment, using constraints and limitations as creative advantages rather than obstacles. Unlike typical Silicon Valley success stories, Wozniak’s approach was radically different. After Apple’s IPO made him worth $88 million, he sold his shares at below-market prices to colleagues who had been excluded from the stock program.

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