Tuesday 10 March 2015

Mark Zuckerberg talks about His Life Style, Why He Wears the Same type of T-Shirt Everday, why he is not a Cool Person, the Objectives of Facebook and Most of his Favourite Quotes

Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook Co-founder & CEO.,
Mark Zuckerberg talks about His Life Style, Why He Wears the Same type of T-Shirt Everday, why he is not a Cool Person, the Objectives of Facebook and Most of his Favourite Quotes
As prelude to Zuckerberg's 31st birthday which is coming up in 4 days time on March 14th, We are celebrating this Creative, Innovative and Down to Earth Genius.

Last year November, Mark stood in front of a town hall-style crowd wearing a plain grey T-shirt and a permanent smile, Mark Zuckerberg discussed his love of plain grey T-shirts -- as well as other pressing issues broached by a handful of Facebook users.
The event, which can be viewed in full here, marked the social network’s first-ever public Q&A. It was inspired by similar internal Q&A events for employees, Zuckerberg said, during which certain inquiries resulted in substantial corporate pivots over the years.
Zuckerberg held court for a little over an hour, discussing everything from the decline of organic reach to the “hurtful” nature of The Social Network film.
Here are five of our favorite takeaways:

1. He thinks fashion is ‘silly and frivolous.’

Having long championed the hoodie, no one’s likely ever accused Zuckerberg of being a fashion plate. But it turns out that there’s a rather telling reason he wears the same grey T-shirt every day -- though they are multiple versions of the same shirt, he assures.
“I really want to clear my life to make it so that I have to make as few decisions as possible about anything except how to best serve this community.” Research has shown that even the smallest decisions can be deeply depleting, Zuckerberg says, and so, like Steve Jobs and President Obama, he has chosen to streamline his wardrobe into a kind of uniform.

2. He’s not an Appletini drinker.

Zuckerberg’s proclivity for the fruity cocktail -- which wasn’t actually trendy during the era of Facebook’s founding -- is just one of the fallacies that The Social Network propagated, he says. Another false premise? That he created Facebook in order to attract women. Zuckerberg said he was dating his now-wife, Priscilla Chan, long before the company’s conception.
“The reality is that writing code and building a product and then building a company actually is not a glamorous enough thing to make a movie about,” Zuckerberg explained. “If they were really making a movie, it would have been of me sitting at a computer coding for two hours straight.”

3. Organic reach isn’t coming back.

Being the founder of a startup himself, Zuckerberg expressed his “empathy” for fellow entrepreneurs struggling to reach new consumers. But as Facebook has grown, content posted to the site has exploded. Of the 1,500 stories that could theoretically appear on the average Facebook feed every day, most people only have time to consume roughly 100 stories, he says.
Therein lies a conflict: “Are we trying to optimize newsfeeds to give each person the best experience when they’re reading, or are we trying to help businesses reach as many people as possible? In every decision that we make, we optimize for the first,” Zuckerberg said.
4. ‘Why did you force us to install Facebook Messenger?’
While Zuckerberg acknowledged that a separate messaging app was a “big ask,” he felt that the decision would ultimately result in a better user experience. Messaging, he explained, is “one of the few things people do more than social networking” -- and therefore warranted a separate platform.
The decision also speaks to the company’s stated intention to create a fleet of app standalones in coming years. “On mobile, each app can really focus on doing one thing well, we think,” Zuckerberg said. And the decision to impart a site-wide mandate -- rather than an opt-in feature -- illustrates the fact that Facebook builds for a collective community in order to avoid a fragmented user experience.

5. Has Facebook lost its ‘cool’ factor?

“My goal was never really to make Facebook cool. I am not a cool person. And I’ve never really tried to be cool,” Zuckerberg said. On the other hand, he has striven to create something that is more “useful” than it is “exciting” -- like electricity, for instance.
And as for concerns that Facebook is being overloaded with photos, Zuckerberg said it is indicative of the ways in which people prefer to communicate today. Five years ago, for instance, the majority of Facebook content comprised text. Fast forwarding another five years, Zuckerberg predicts that the bulk of site’s content will be made up of video. 
we've compiled 10 of the tech entrepreneur's most interesting quotes over the years. 
Here they are, in no particular order. Enjoy.
1. "Move fast and break things. Unless you are breaking stuff, you are not moving fast enough." (Oct. 2009)
2. "If I were starting now I would do things very differently. I didn’t know anything. In Silicon Valley, you get this feeling that you have to be out here. But it’s not the only place to be. If I were starting now, I would have stayed in Boston. [Silicon Valley] is a little short-term focused and that bothers me." (Oct. 2011)
3. "I remember really vividly, you know, having pizza with my friends a day or two after -- I opened up the first version of Facebook at the time I thought, 'You know, someone needs to build a service like this for the world. But I just never thought that we'd be the ones to help do it. And I think a lot of what it comes down to is we just cared more." (Jan. 2014)
4. "The question isn't, 'What do we want to know about people?', It's, 'What do people want to tell about themselves?'" (Nov. 2011)
5. "The biggest risk is not taking any risk. In a world that's changing really quickly, the only strategy that is guaranteed to fail is not taking risks." (Oct. 2011) 
6. "Building a mission and building a business go hand-in-hand. It is true that the primary thing that makes me excited about what we're doing is the mission, but I also think, from the very beginning, we've had this healthy understanding which is that we need to do both." (Sept. 2012)
7. "The Hacker Way is an approach to building that involves continuous improvement and iteration. Hackers believe that something can always be better, and that nothing is ever complete." (Feb. 2012)
8. “People can be really smart or have skills that are directly applicable, but if they don’t really believe in it, then they are not going to really work hard.” (Oct. 2005)
9. “I don’t want Facebook to be an American company. I don’t want it to be this company that just spreads American values all across the world. ...My view on this is that you want to be really culturally sensitive and understand the way that people actually think.” (June 2011)
10. "My goal was never to just create a company. A lot of people misinterpret that, as if I don't care about revenue or profit or any of those things. But what not being 'just' a company means to me is building something that actually makes a really big change in the world."

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