If you want people to act like owners, make them owners. That was Steve Jobs' philosophy, and he laid it out plainly at the International Design Conference in Aspen back in June 1983, when stock options were still a relatively novel concept in corporate America.
How Stock Options Actually Work
When someone asked the Apple Inc. (AAPL) co-founder about giving workers a stake in the company, Jobs didn't just offer platitudes. He walked through the mechanics. Simply selling company stock to employees, he explained, would mean asking them to bet huge amounts, maybe even their life savings, on a single company. That's a terrible deal for most people.
Instead, Apple granted options at the current share price, exercisable over four years. Here's the beauty of it: if the stock tanked or went nowhere, employees could just walk away without losing a dime. But if it climbed, they could borrow money to exercise their options at the old, lower price and pocket the difference. The options vested at 25% per year, which meant if the stock performed well, people had a strong incentive to stick around for the full four years.
Building an Ownership Mentality
But Jobs made clear the real goal wasn't clever financial structuring. It was about creating a sense of ownership. He wanted people to "work for Apple first and your boss second," to feel like "this is your company," not just a place where you show up, do your job, and leave.
The numbers backed up his commitment. Before Apple went public, more than 80% of the company was owned by employees. Even at the time of his 1983 speech, roughly half remained in employee hands. "I don't think finance is what drives people at Apple," Jobs said. The deeper motivation was building something that felt like theirs.
The Talent Magnet Effect
That philosophy stayed with Jobs throughout his career at Apple. He obsessed over recruiting what he called "insanely great" talent, articulating a shared vision and creating what he described as the world's "largest startup," a place where employees felt genuine pride and fierce loyalty.
Guy Kawasaki, co-founder of Alltop.com and a former Apple evangelist, cited Jobs' ownership philosophy as the most important lesson he ever learned from the Apple founder. It wasn't just about retention or compensation packages. It was about making people believe they were building something extraordinary together, and giving them a tangible stake in that success.