The one thing Bill Gates understood immediately but took 20 years for Steve Jobs to realise
Gates' ability to quickly grasp the value of an industry-spanning platform rather than merely products was what made Microsoft a dominant PC player within a few years.

According to "Strategy Rules," a book written by two prominent business school professors, David Yoffie and Michael Cusumano, Gates' ability to quickly grasp the value of an "industry-spanning platform rather than merely products" was what made Microsoft a dominant PC player within a few years.
In fact, Gates understood it from the get-go, while it took Apple's Steve Jobs over two decades to realize it, the book writes.
"Bill Gates got it immediately," Yoffie said, according to The New York Times. "It took Andy Grove 10 years to figure it out, and 20 years for Steve Jobs."
Gates had this in mind when he built the Windows operating system, where third party developers were allowed to create software applications on top of it. By doing so, Windows was able to build a massive software ecosystem that helped it dominate the PC market for years.
Intel's former CEO Andy Grove also saw this coming, and soon built microprocessors that were used across multiple industries.
"Jobs was always a product first, platform second kind of guy. But he figured it out eventually," Yoffie said.
The authors point out the same thinking applies to the tech leaders of the next generation as well: Google's Larry Page, Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg, Amazon's Jeff Bezos, and Tencent's Huateng Ma all have a deep understanding of "platform thinking," they said.
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