🚨 In 1992, a MIT lecture quietly revealed more about product and sales than most 2-year MBAs ever will.
Most people have never seen it.
It came from Steve Jobs and instead of teaching theory, he broke down how great products actually win.
Watching it today feels unreal.
He explained that people don’t buy products they buy meaning. The best products aren’t just functional, they connect with how people see themselves. That’s why some ideas spread effortlessly while others die, even if they’re technically better.
He also made it clear that marketing isn’t about features. It’s about clarity. If you can’t explain why your product matters in simple terms, it won’t matter at all. Complexity doesn’t impress it confuses.
And his biggest edge? Obsession with experience. Not just what the product does, but how it feels. The small details, the simplicity, the story that’s what separates good from unforgettable.
That’s why this MIT lecture still hits hard.
Because while most people are building products…
Very few understand why people actually buy them.
Everyone at Millwall is deeply saddened to learn of the passing of former manager Billy Bonds MBE, aged 79.
Billy oversaw 53 games for The Lions between 1997 and 1998, signing Neil Harris in the process, who would later become the club’s all-time record goalscorer.
Our thoughts are with Billy’s family, friends and everyone at West Ham United.
A bit difficult calling for unity when you accuse the police of antisemitism for banning Maccabi, which further divides the country
Until you apologise to the British people for conflating public safety with antisemitism you, Mahmood and Nandy will be the reminders of how politicians will lie for political ideology instead of stand up and speak the truth; truth which is desperately needed in an age os misinformation
Zack Polanski, the only Jewish leader of a UK political party today, had the integrity to say it wasn't antisemitism and was instead a matter of public safety
It's a shame that you as PM did not, and have not as yet apologised for mislabeling public safety