Top 61 Quotes & Sayings by Tony Fadell

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American inventor Tony Fadell.
Last updated on September 17, 2024.
Tony Fadell

Anthony Michael Fadell is an American engineer, designer, entrepreneur, and active investor. He is the co-creator of the iPod and the iPhone, and founder and former CEO of Nest Labs.

You have to look at why people come and work at Nest. Part of it is that a lot of people here already know each other, but we're also on a mission with a purpose. People are personally motivated by energy or safety.
I learned the power of 'no.' No is really important. Entrepreneurs are told to say 'yes, yes, more, more.'
Computers are great tools, but they need to be applied to the physical world. — © Tony Fadell
Computers are great tools, but they need to be applied to the physical world.
With most tech guys, it's the same outfit every day - they wear their company logo.
Every person I talk to has a story about how their smoke alarm went off or woke them up with a battery beeping. So you take it off the wall and you take the battery out and say 'screw this.' They hate the products.
In Tahoe, you want to be able check on the temperature of the house or turn it on before you get there. Because it's really cold in the winter.
It wasn't until the Apple Macintosh that people understood what true hardware-software integration was about. It took one company to line it up: low-cost hardware, cool graphics, third-party products built on top of it, in an all-in-one attractive package that was accessible to consumer marketing.
There are two different types of prototyping. First, the gut sense. You know how far you can take it. Second, you need experts to figure out whether or not it is attainable.
I've been working with contractors designing and building a house on a nonstop basis since 2005. I learned about all these systems of audio, construction, electricity, energy, water systems.
Having kids makes you think about the world differently.
Google has the business resources, global scale and platform reach to accelerate Nest growth across hardware, software and services for the home globally.
I used to work about 100 hours a week; now it's about 70. But 40 hours? Forget about it. Either you're all in, or your not.
I look at the world and peer into products and think, 'What's wrong with these products?'
I say homes are for families, and you have to make sure you design for the family, not just one person: kids, your wife, your grandparents need to be able to use it.
At the end of the day, customer choice is essential. And we don't make products that compete with Apple, nor make products that compete with Google. Our customers come in both iOS and Android flavors, and I hope our customers can still buy the products they want to purchase wherever they want to purchase them.
Your television has changed, your phone has changed. Why don't these other things you need, that the government tells you you must have in your home, change? — © Tony Fadell
Your television has changed, your phone has changed. Why don't these other things you need, that the government tells you you must have in your home, change?
People buy products, and they want to understand what those things are and how they are applicable to their life.
Nest really came out of a process where I was trying to design the most connected and the most green home that I knew of. I was curious of just about everything that goes into a home and building a home.
Typical mergers happen when there are two competitors coming together, and they reduce overhead.
You start with the right amount of rational and emotional experiences. You have to blend those in your product when you come out.
When I was four or five years old, my grandfather showed me how to build things, paint, saw. Through years of fixing bikes, repairing lawn mowers, I learned how things work.
Usually, the biggest companies are not the most dynamic.
It's not just about turning up or down the heat, it's about the other experiences that come with turning up or down the heat - what are we doing about energy, what are we doing about your health and safety.
I knew there were all kinds of interesting things going on at Google, but now that I've seen them, my mind has been blown - in a great way. They have all these amazing projects and people that the world doesn't know anything about. I'm like a kid in a candy store - it's an idea factory.
Learning by doing is the only way I know how to learn.
I knew a lot about product design before coming to Apple, but I didn't understand a lot about consumer experience design, which is really Apple's forte.
I have not seen a true grounds-up revolution from a bunch of companies getting together. It takes one company to put it together, then people draft off of that, but they don't build it top to bottom with a specific vision.
Nest Thermostat owners like the carbon monoxide link. If Nest Protect's carbon monoxide alarm goes off, the Nest Thermostat automatically turns off the gas furnace.
If you look at where the tried and true of Silicon Valley VC's are investing, it's in people who understand what it takes, who've been through it and have a network of people they can tap and resources to pull together.
I started designing the greenest the most connected home before the iPhone and the iPad.
Well, you can say there is a self driving car. I'm seeing the automation of vehicles. Really, computer-assisted driving. I think that is really interesting to us because we are taking all of the sensors technologies and putting them in cars and making people safer.
To help you focus, to help you really understand what you're doing, you have to say no a lot. When you say yes to everything, you get distracted. When you say no, you have to get the one thing you're doing really right.
Most thermostats are built by plumbing companies. But you really need to understand how to build a phone to make them better.
I've learnt something from every failure. The products I helped design at the first two companies I worked for were utter failures. But now I know why.
If you look at most successful startups, they're run by people in their mid to late forties, who've gone through the trenches multiple times and had multiple failures, so they understand.
While I was designing my home, I was living in different houses all around the world, and I saw thermostats that were just as bad as the ones in the U.S., or houses that needed them but didn't have them. I realised that this was a worldwide problem. I thought, 'Let's fix it.'
We work crazy hours in Silicon Valley; my wife says we're all kind of diseased in some way. We're totally obsessive compulsive - when we see an idea, we're like, 'let me in, it's so much fun.'
Thermostats are made by very large companies with no incentive to innovate. Their customers are contractors or HVAC wholesalers, not consumers. So why spend to make them better? It's a good business.
If you don't have an emotionally engaging design for a device, no one will care about it. — © Tony Fadell
If you don't have an emotionally engaging design for a device, no one will care about it.
I had been doing MP3 players and handheld computers since 1990-1991, and so they sought me out because of my experience. And about 18 generations of iPod and three generations of iPhone later, I decided to leave Apple.
We built the iPod in weeks. It had to be what I thought it was going to be because there wasn't time for endless refinements.
I don't look backwards. I'm pleasantly surprised, and I feel really proud of the team and what we were able to accomplish together. But really, where I'm focused is the future and where Nest is going.
No amount of data will tell you if a feature should be in the product, because it doesn't exist. You need to have a very clear leader with a clear point of view... otherwise, you get a mishmash of features and stuff that doesn't make a lot of sense.
You need to set near-term milestones. Put the assumptions down on paper, and make it to your vision or ultimate product. Your team has to understand where they're going. Your partners need to understand where they're going.
It can't be that difficult to build a great thermostat. So I decided to figure out: What would the thermostat for the iPhone generation look like? I got this bug. It really infected my brain. I kept thinking about it. This could be a cool product that matters and a cool product that has a great business.
Studies have shown that children are less likely to wake up to a horn than the sound of a mother's voice.
I don't want the iPod to be my defining thing.
The truth is, homes change over time — and technology has to adapt, not try to do everything at once.
There are a lot of designers who think they understand technology and a lot of technology guys who think they understand design. But to put them together and make it robust and repeatable for the mass market? It's an art.
When I encounter a problem - something that's not quite right with a product - I enjoy breaking it down in my mind and exploring possible alternative solutions: Why this? Why not that? I apply the latest in technology and design to reinvent that product and solve my frustrations.
I'm always doubtful. Everything I do is always doubtful. When you're trying to differentiate, there's going to be this gut sense, is this right? If you're not having doubt, then you're not pushing it hard enough, or you're not looking at the details close enough. You need to be feeling that doubt every single day.
We're thrilled to join Google. With their support, Nest will be even better placed to build simple, thoughtful devices that make life easier at home, and that have a positive impact on the world.
Learn by doing. Learn through experiences. And this goes back to Steve Jobs' thing - which is the way you open up your knowledge of the world is by discovering it and learning about it, not through books, but by being there.
Over the next ten years, everything that has a cord is going to have data in it. — © Tony Fadell
Over the next ten years, everything that has a cord is going to have data in it.
We built the iPod in weeks. It had to be what I thought it was going to be because there wasnt time for endless refinements.
If you're not having doubt, you're not pushing the boundaries far enough.
Every team member who brings intelligence, experience and passion to their creations should be called an artist or designer.
It's easy to solve a problem that everyone sees, but it's hard to solve a problem that almost no one sees.
Even if you have constrained resources, don't cut corners. People will feel it.
Every person I talk to has a story about how their smoke alarm went off or woke them up with a battery beeping. So you take it off the wall and you take the battery out and say screw this. They hate the products.
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