Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American businessman Steven Sinofsky.
Last updated on April 14, 2025.
Steven Jay Sinofsky is a former president of the Windows Division at Microsoft from July 2009 until his resignation on November 13, 2012. He was responsible for the development and marketing of Windows, Internet Explorer, and online services such as Outlook.com and SkyDrive. Sinofsky is currently a board partner at Andreessen Horowitz, where he serves on boards of investments.
Management, at every level, is about the effort to frame challenges, define end states, and allocate resources to navigate between them.
I always feel great. I get to come to work every day and see the build from the night before, and every day we do more stuff.
I've always advocated using the break between product cycles as an opportunity to reflect and to look ahead, and that applies to me, too.
Groups tend to believe their work is harder, more strategic, or just more valuable while underestimating those contributions from other groups.
Continuous productivity manifests itself as an environment where the evolving tools and culture make it possible to innovate more and faster than ever, with significantly improved execution.
When faced with something complex, spend the time to think about some structure, write down sentences, think about it some more, and then share it.
It's not cool to have your name in print when it's not the truth.
It is impossible to count the blessings I have received over my years at Microsoft. I am humbled by the professionalism and generosity of everyone I have had the good fortune to work with at this awesome company.
No matter how you look at it, one person cannot be evaluated and paid in isolation of budgets.
Innovation and disruption are the hallmarks of the technology world, and hardly a moment passes when we are not thinking, doing, or talking about these topics.
When you build a product, you make a lot of assumptions about the state of the art of technology, the best business practices, and potential customer usage/behavior.
I like a good cliche because it reminds you that much of management practice boils down to things you need to do but often forget or fail to do often enough.
Macintosh felt like a system. As I learned more, I felt like I was able to guess how new things would work. I felt like the bugs in my programs were more my bugs and not things I misunderstood.
As much as we think of performance management as numeric and thus perfectly quantifiable, it is as much a product of context and social science as the products we design and develop.
Things will absolutely go wrong. In a healthy team, as soon as things go wrong, that information should be surfaced. Trying to hide or obscure bad news creates an environment of distrust or lack of transparency.
After more than 23 years working on a wide range of Microsoft products, I have decided to leave the company to seek new opportunities that build on these experiences.
The best work for creative folks on the team is when the problem is big and the solution escapes everyone.
From a product development perspective, choosing whether a technology is disruptive at a potential moment is key.
A moment of disruption is where the conversation about disruption often begins, even though determining that moment is entirely hindsight.
My father, an entrepreneur but hardly a technologist, was looking to buy a computer to 'automate' our family business. In 1981, he characteristically dove head first into computing and bought an Osborne I.
The cloud-powered smartphone and tablet, as productivity tools, are transforming the world around us along with the implied changes in how we work to be mobile and more social.
Disruption is a critical element of the evolution of technology - from the positive and negative aspects of disruption a typical pattern emerges, as new technologies come to market and subsequently take hold.
When you delegate work to the member of the team, your job is to clearly frame success and describe the objectives.
Despite demand, the BlackBerry avoided offering generalized web browsing support.
The industrial revolution that defined the first half of the 20 century marked the start of modern business, typified by high-volume, large-scale organizations. Mechanization created a culture of business derived from the capabilities and needs of the time.
With the general availability of Windows 8/RT and Surface, I have decided it is time for me to take a step back from my responsibilities at Microsoft.
BlackBerry required tethering for some routine operations, and for many, the only way to integrate corporate mail was to keep a PC running all the time.
While my friends were busy listening to the Talking Heads, Police, and B-52s, I was busy teaching myself to program on the Atari.
Knowledge created a new culture of business derived from the information gathering and analysis capabilities of first the mainframe and then the PC.
Assuming a specific resource is high cost is often a path to disruption when someone makes a different assumption.
People love to play expectations games, and that is always bad for collaboration internal to a team, with your manager, or externally with customers.
If the work requires smart, talented, creative people, then more than anything, you want to enable folks on the team to create.
At some point, a group of people working towards similar goals will exhibit a distribution of performance.
A mouse has the precision that your finger can't approach.