Everyone Thought Steve Jobs Was an Ascetic. In Reality, He Was a Genius of Efficiency
For years, the image of Steve Jobs was associated with asceticism: the same black turtleneck, a limited number of choices, strict discipline. However, a closer look reveals that this was never about rejecting comfort. It was a strategy built around maximum efficiency.
Jobs did not save resources — he reallocated them. And this approach is especially relevant today for entrepreneurs operating under constant pressure, high workloads, and chronic time scarcity.
Minimalism as a Tool for Saving Time
According to biographers and people from Jobs’s inner circle, by minimising routine decisions he was able to:
Save 30–40 minutes per day simply by eliminating trivial choices such as clothing and everyday details
Reduce the number of daily micro-decisions by 20–30%, equivalent to 3–5 hours of mental energy per week
Free up one to two deep-focus blocks per day (2–3 hours each) dedicated entirely to product and strategy
In practical terms, this meant:
15–20 hours of pure focus per week
700–900 hours per year redirected away from operational noise and toward critical decisions
This was not about convenience. It was about controlled, measurable outcomes.
Jobs’s Assistant and the Protection of His Time
One crucial detail is often overlooked: Steve Jobs always had an assistant — often more than one. Their role went far beyond administration. Their core responsibility was protecting the executive’s time.
According to former Apple employees, Jobs’s assistants:
Filtered out up to 70–80% of incoming requests
Strictly controlled meetings, allowing only those where Jobs’s involvement was truly essential
Grouped communications to prevent constant context switching
Saved him 10–15 hours per week by removing organisational friction
Combined, personal minimisation and the structured work of an assistant allowed Jobs to reclaim up to 25–30 hours per week that he did not spend on routine matters.
Why Entrepreneurs Today Lose More Time Than Jobs Did
The average entrepreneur today:
Manages their own calendar
Personally filters email and messages
Attends the majority of meetings
Oversees processes that could easily be delegated
HR analytics show that this consumes 40–60% of working time, while up to 70% of these tasks do not require an owner-level decision-maker. As a result, entrepreneurs work constantly, yet their impact is diluted across operational tasks rather than focused on growth.
Jobs’s Efficiency Was Not About Doing Less
It was about doing only what required his level. He:
Delegated masterfully
Protected focus as a strategic asset
Built systems, people, and processes that absorbed unnecessary workload
In this structure, an assistant was not a convenience — but a multiplier of effectiveness. Steve Jobs was not an ascetic. He was someone who treated his attention with exceptional care.
Today, entrepreneurs would benefit from asking themselves an honest question: are you running your business — or servicing its operations?
True efficiency is not minimalism for the sake of image. It is the ability to create an environment where you focus exclusively on what genuinely moves the business forward.
Experience shows that a successful entrepreneur needs a strong assistant by their side — someone who takes ownership of operations, protects time, and enables sustained growth.
At Smart & Talentedwe recruit exactly these kinds of assistants: professional, reliable, and aligned with your management style. We do not simply fill vacancies — we strengthen businesses.
If you are ready to free up your time for strategic priorities, submit a request for assistant recruitment, and we will take the process off your hands: https://smart-and-talented.com/