THE BACKSTORY

Billions of people have used these products.

And though they were made by many amazing teams at many companies, there is one person who connects them all.
Billions of products by Tony Fadell
Billions of products by Tony Fadell
Billions of products by Tony Fadell

Billions of people have used these products.

And though they were made by many amazing teams at many companies, there is one person who connects them all.

Meet Tony.

He’s an engineer and a designer, an investor, mentor, and now an author. And he makes things – things that have changed the world.

Meet-Tony-Fadell.jpg

This is not an overnight success story.

Tony Fadell polaroid
Tony Fadell polaroid
Tony Fadell polaroid
Tony Fadell polaroid

This is not an overnight success story.

Tony’s first job out of college was such a disaster that it killed all new development in consumer-oriented personal computers for a decade. The next products he built were commercial failures, then he started his own company – a year before the .com bubble burst.

But after 10 years he learned – with every team, every product, every disaster – how to design, manufacture, market and sell something people actually wanted.

Magic Link
Velo and Nino
Fuse
iPod
18 generations of the iPod
First three generations of the iPhone
<p>Nest Learning Thermostat</p><p>Nest Protect</p><p>Nest Cams</p>
Build - An Unorthodox Guide to Making Things Worth Making

Nothing exists in a vacuum.

To understand how the iPod or iPhone or Nest was created, you have to understand where they came from.

Building the future

Each creation informs the next. With these incredible products in the past, Tony eagerly looks to the future.
Year
Magic Link
GENERAL MAGIC

Before Wi-Fi, before the rise of the internet, before mobile networks even existed, General Magic tried to make a smart personal communicator – what we’d call a smartphone today. It was way, way before its time but perfectly timed for Tony. General Magic was his first real job.   After years of exhausting work, the Magic Link launched with a touchscreen, email, downloadable apps, games, a way to buy electronic plane tickets, animated emojis and much more. Unfortunately, it was also slow, buggy, and was solving problems nobody had yet. It failed. Spectacularly. 

UNITS SOLD: THOUSANDS
Year
Velo and Nino
Philips

As General Magic was imploding, Tony pitched a new kind of mobile personal computer to Philips. He became a 25-year-old CTO, managing his first product engineering team. It was, in a word, bumpy. But the team made it through – they used the hardware guts from the Magic Link but added spreadsheets and docs for business people on the go.   Unfortunately, Philips only knew how to sell TVs and DVD players and electric shavers. So while the Velo and Nino were well thought out and well reviewed, they barely sold.

UNITS SOLD: Hundreds of thousands
Year
Fuse
Fuse

Inspired by audiobooks on the Nino and Velo and a doomed technology he saw at Philips (a home theater that ran Windows), Tony started a company to create digital home music and video systems that could play CDs, MP3s and DVDs, but could also rip CDs so all your music was loaded into one jukebox. Tony started working with Samsung to build it and make it all available online.   Unfortunately, in 2000 the Internet 1.0 bubble burst, and the endless fountain of investor money dried up overnight. Tony did 80 pitches to VCs that all failed.

UNITS SOLD: Zero
Year
iPod
APPLE

Apple, itself on the verge of collapse, called Tony just as his startup was going under. They were thinking of making a digital music player. But there was no team, no prototypes, no design, nothing. In March, Tony and Stan Ng pitched Tony’s idea to Steve Jobs. In October, they launched the iPod to the world.   Reviewers loved it. So did the few remaining Apple fanatics. But the first version of the iPod didn’t work with PCs, so almost nobody else could use it. And that meant almost nobody else bought it.

UNITS SOLD: Hundreds of thousands
Year
18 generations of the iPod
Apple

Tony and the iPod team battled Steve Jobs to convince him to let the iPod connect to PCs, not just Macs, and that’s when sales exploded. Tony led the teams that created the iPod Classic, iPod Mini, iPod Nano, iPod Shuffle, and iPod Touch, as well as all headphones and accessories. It was incredibly successful, incredibly lucrative. It saved Apple.   But times were changing. Mobile phone makers saw the iPod’s success and wanted to add music to their products. Apple knew customers would only carry one device in their pockets – and if Apple didn’t leap-frog those cell phones, the iPod business would eventually dwindle and die.

UNITS SOLD: Hundreds of millions
Year
First three generations of the iPhone
Apple

For the first time since the demise of the Magic Link, a major player was going to create a smartphone for regular people. Not just business people – everyone. It was Tony’s chance to try again. To make a Magic Link that actually felt magical. His team designed and built the hardware and the foundational software to run and manufacture the phone. And he used everything he had learned up till then – how to build a team that could actually deliver, how to think about the product story, how to understand not just the technology but the entire user experience.   Every step along the way, every failure and success, was necessary to create the iPhone. And then to build what came next.

UNITS SOLD: Billions sold
Year

Nest Learning Thermostat

Nest Protect

Nest Cams

NEST

As Tony was building it, he could see the potential of the iPhone. It was going to become a remote control for the physical world. And one of the things that drove him absolutely crazy about the physical world was his crappy thermostat – how he couldn’t turn up the heat before he got home, how it wasted untold amounts of energy.   It was time to do something new. Not just to build new products – to build a business. To create an ecosystem of products – a thermostat, a smoke alarm, a camera – and a platform to connect them. It was time to fundamentally change what home could be.

UNITS SOLD: Hundreds of millions
Year
Build - An Unorthodox Guide to Making Things Worth Making
BUILD COLLECTIVE

Tony learned that writing a book is actually the easy part of ‘writing a book’. A book is not just a manuscript. It’s the design of a logo, the cover, the diagrams, the page layout. It’s publisher negotiation. Asking friends for quotes. PR and launch events. Social Media posts and Premium Placement across airport bookstores. But, this book was a thing worth making, so Tony assembled a team and they got to work. The result made bestseller lists and, more importantly, people are using it the way it was intended: as an ongoing resource and reference vs a read-it-and-shelf-it.

UNITS SOLD: New York Times & Wall Street Journal Bestseller

Nothing exists in a vacuum.

To understand how the iPod or iPhone or Nest was created, you have to understand where they came from.

Before Wi-Fi, before the rise of the internet, before mobile networks even existed, General Magic tried to make a smart personal communicator – what we’d call a smartphone today. It was way, way before its time but perfectly timed for Tony. General Magic was his first real job.   After years of exhausting work, the Magic Link launched with a touchscreen, email, downloadable apps, games, a way to buy electronic plane tickets, animated emojis and much more. Unfortunately, it was also slow, buggy, and was solving problems nobody had yet. It failed. Spectacularly. 

Year
Magic Link
GENERAL MAGIC
GENERAL MAGIC
Magic Link

Before Wi-Fi, before the rise of the internet, before mobile networks even existed, General Magic tried to make a smart personal communicator – what we’d call a smartphone today. It was way, way before its time but perfectly timed for Tony. General Magic was his first real job.   After years of exhausting work, the Magic Link launched with a touchscreen, email, downloadable apps, games, a way to buy electronic plane tickets, animated emojis and much more. Unfortunately, it was also slow, buggy, and was solving problems nobody had yet. It failed. Spectacularly. 

Before Wi-Fi, before the rise of the internet, before mobile networks even existed, General Magic tried to make a smart personal communicator – what we’d call a smartphone today. It was way, way before its time but perfectly timed for Tony. General Magic was his first real job.   After years of exhausting work, the Magic Link launched with a touchscreen, email, downloadable apps, games, a way to buy electronic plane tickets, animated emojis and much more. Unfortunately, it was also slow, buggy, and was solving problems nobody had yet. It failed. Spectacularly. 

UNITS SOLD: THOUSANDS

As General Magic was imploding, Tony pitched a new kind of mobile personal computer to Philips. He became a 25-year-old CTO, managing his first product engineering team. It was, in a word, bumpy. But the team made it through – they used the hardware guts from the Magic Link but added spreadsheets and docs for business people on the go.   Unfortunately, Philips only knew how to sell TVs and DVD players and electric shavers. So while the Velo and Nino were well thought out and well reviewed, they barely sold.

Year
Velo and Nino
Philips
Philips
Velo and Nino

As General Magic was imploding, Tony pitched a new kind of mobile personal computer to Philips. He became a 25-year-old CTO, managing his first product engineering team. It was, in a word, bumpy. But the team made it through – they used the hardware guts from the Magic Link but added spreadsheets and docs for business people on the go.   Unfortunately, Philips only knew how to sell TVs and DVD players and electric shavers. So while the Velo and Nino were well thought out and well reviewed, they barely sold.

As General Magic was imploding, Tony pitched a new kind of mobile personal computer to Philips. He became a 25-year-old CTO, managing his first product engineering team. It was, in a word, bumpy. But the team made it through – they used the hardware guts from the Magic Link but added spreadsheets and docs for business people on the go.   Unfortunately, Philips only knew how to sell TVs and DVD players and electric shavers. So while the Velo and Nino were well thought out and well reviewed, they barely sold.

UNITS SOLD: Hundreds of thousands

Inspired by audiobooks on the Nino and Velo and a doomed technology he saw at Philips (a home theater that ran Windows), Tony started a company to create digital home music and video systems that could play CDs, MP3s and DVDs, but could also rip CDs so all your music was loaded into one jukebox. Tony started working with Samsung to build it and make it all available online.   Unfortunately, in 2000 the Internet 1.0 bubble burst, and the endless fountain of investor money dried up overnight. Tony did 80 pitches to VCs that all failed.

Year
Fuse
Fuse
Fuse
Fuse
Fuse

Inspired by audiobooks on the Nino and Velo and a doomed technology he saw at Philips (a home theater that ran Windows), Tony started a company to create digital home music and video systems that could play CDs, MP3s and DVDs, but could also rip CDs so all your music was loaded into one jukebox. Tony started working with Samsung to build it and make it all available online.   Unfortunately, in 2000 the Internet 1.0 bubble burst, and the endless fountain of investor money dried up overnight. Tony did 80 pitches to VCs that all failed.

Inspired by audiobooks on the Nino and Velo and a doomed technology he saw at Philips (a home theater that ran Windows), Tony started a company to create digital home music and video systems that could play CDs, MP3s and DVDs, but could also rip CDs so all your music was loaded into one jukebox. Tony started working with Samsung to build it and make it all available online.   Unfortunately, in 2000 the Internet 1.0 bubble burst, and the endless fountain of investor money dried up overnight. Tony did 80 pitches to VCs that all failed.

UNITS SOLD: Zero

Apple, itself on the verge of collapse, called Tony just as his startup was going under. They were thinking of making a digital music player. But there was no team, no prototypes, no design, nothing. In March, Tony and Stan Ng pitched Tony’s idea to Steve Jobs. In October, they launched the iPod to the world.   Reviewers loved it. So did the few remaining Apple fanatics. But the first version of the iPod didn’t work with PCs, so almost nobody else could use it. And that meant almost nobody else bought it.

Year
iPod
APPLE
APPLE
iPod

Apple, itself on the verge of collapse, called Tony just as his startup was going under. They were thinking of making a digital music player. But there was no team, no prototypes, no design, nothing. In March, Tony and Stan Ng pitched Tony’s idea to Steve Jobs. In October, they launched the iPod to the world.   Reviewers loved it. So did the few remaining Apple fanatics. But the first version of the iPod didn’t work with PCs, so almost nobody else could use it. And that meant almost nobody else bought it.

Apple, itself on the verge of collapse, called Tony just as his startup was going under. They were thinking of making a digital music player. But there was no team, no prototypes, no design, nothing. In March, Tony and Stan Ng pitched Tony’s idea to Steve Jobs. In October, they launched the iPod to the world.   Reviewers loved it. So did the few remaining Apple fanatics. But the first version of the iPod didn’t work with PCs, so almost nobody else could use it. And that meant almost nobody else bought it.

UNITS SOLD: Hundreds of thousands

Tony and the iPod team battled Steve Jobs to convince him to let the iPod connect to PCs, not just Macs, and that’s when sales exploded. Tony led the teams that created the iPod Classic, iPod Mini, iPod Nano, iPod Shuffle, and iPod Touch, as well as all headphones and accessories. It was incredibly successful, incredibly lucrative. It saved Apple.   But times were changing. Mobile phone makers saw the iPod’s success and wanted to add music to their products. Apple knew customers would only carry one device in their pockets – and if Apple didn’t leap-frog those cell phones, the iPod business would eventually dwindle and die.

Year
Year
18 generations of the iPod
Apple
Apple
18 generations of the iPod

Tony and the iPod team battled Steve Jobs to convince him to let the iPod connect to PCs, not just Macs, and that’s when sales exploded. Tony led the teams that created the iPod Classic, iPod Mini, iPod Nano, iPod Shuffle, and iPod Touch, as well as all headphones and accessories. It was incredibly successful, incredibly lucrative. It saved Apple.   But times were changing. Mobile phone makers saw the iPod’s success and wanted to add music to their products. Apple knew customers would only carry one device in their pockets – and if Apple didn’t leap-frog those cell phones, the iPod business would eventually dwindle and die.

Tony and the iPod team battled Steve Jobs to convince him to let the iPod connect to PCs, not just Macs, and that’s when sales exploded. Tony led the teams that created the iPod Classic, iPod Mini, iPod Nano, iPod Shuffle, and iPod Touch, as well as all headphones and accessories. It was incredibly successful, incredibly lucrative. It saved Apple.   But times were changing. Mobile phone makers saw the iPod’s success and wanted to add music to their products. Apple knew customers would only carry one device in their pockets – and if Apple didn’t leap-frog those cell phones, the iPod business would eventually dwindle and die.

UNITS SOLD: Hundreds of millions

For the first time since the demise of the Magic Link, a major player was going to create a smartphone for regular people. Not just business people – everyone. It was Tony’s chance to try again. To make a Magic Link that actually felt magical. His team designed and built the hardware and the foundational software to run and manufacture the phone. And he used everything he had learned up till then – how to build a team that could actually deliver, how to think about the product story, how to understand not just the technology but the entire user experience.   Every step along the way, every failure and success, was necessary to create the iPhone. And then to build what came next.

Year
First three generations of the iPhone
Apple
Apple
First three generations of the iPhone

For the first time since the demise of the Magic Link, a major player was going to create a smartphone for regular people. Not just business people – everyone. It was Tony’s chance to try again. To make a Magic Link that actually felt magical. His team designed and built the hardware and the foundational software to run and manufacture the phone. And he used everything he had learned up till then – how to build a team that could actually deliver, how to think about the product story, how to understand not just the technology but the entire user experience.   Every step along the way, every failure and success, was necessary to create the iPhone. And then to build what came next.

For the first time since the demise of the Magic Link, a major player was going to create a smartphone for regular people. Not just business people – everyone. It was Tony’s chance to try again. To make a Magic Link that actually felt magical. His team designed and built the hardware and the foundational software to run and manufacture the phone. And he used everything he had learned up till then – how to build a team that could actually deliver, how to think about the product story, how to understand not just the technology but the entire user experience.   Every step along the way, every failure and success, was necessary to create the iPhone. And then to build what came next.

UNITS SOLD: Billions sold

As Tony was building it, he could see the potential of the iPhone. It was going to become a remote control for the physical world. And one of the things that drove him absolutely crazy about the physical world was his crappy thermostat – how he couldn’t turn up the heat before he got home, how it wasted untold amounts of energy.   It was time to do something new. Not just to build new products – to build a business. To create an ecosystem of products – a thermostat, a smoke alarm, a camera – and a platform to connect them. It was time to fundamentally change what home could be.

Year
<p>Nest Learning Thermostat</p><p>Nest Protect</p><p>Nest Cams</p>
NEST
NEST

Nest Learning Thermostat

Nest Protect

Nest Cams

As Tony was building it, he could see the potential of the iPhone. It was going to become a remote control for the physical world. And one of the things that drove him absolutely crazy about the physical world was his crappy thermostat – how he couldn’t turn up the heat before he got home, how it wasted untold amounts of energy.   It was time to do something new. Not just to build new products – to build a business. To create an ecosystem of products – a thermostat, a smoke alarm, a camera – and a platform to connect them. It was time to fundamentally change what home could be.

As Tony was building it, he could see the potential of the iPhone. It was going to become a remote control for the physical world. And one of the things that drove him absolutely crazy about the physical world was his crappy thermostat – how he couldn’t turn up the heat before he got home, how it wasted untold amounts of energy.   It was time to do something new. Not just to build new products – to build a business. To create an ecosystem of products – a thermostat, a smoke alarm, a camera – and a platform to connect them. It was time to fundamentally change what home could be.

UNITS SOLD: Hundreds of millions

Tony learned that writing a book is actually the easy part of ‘writing a book’. A book is not just a manuscript. It’s the design of a logo, the cover, the diagrams, the page layout. It’s publisher negotiation. Asking friends for quotes. PR and launch events. Social Media posts and Premium Placement across airport bookstores. But, this book was a thing worth making, so Tony assembled a team and they got to work. The result made bestseller lists and, more importantly, people are using it the way it was intended: as an ongoing resource and reference vs a read-it-and-shelf-it.

Year
Build - An Unorthodox Guide to Making Things Worth Making
BUILD COLLECTIVE
BUILD COLLECTIVE
Build - An Unorthodox Guide to Making Things Worth Making

Tony learned that writing a book is actually the easy part of ‘writing a book’. A book is not just a manuscript. It’s the design of a logo, the cover, the diagrams, the page layout. It’s publisher negotiation. Asking friends for quotes. PR and launch events. Social Media posts and Premium Placement across airport bookstores. But, this book was a thing worth making, so Tony assembled a team and they got to work. The result made bestseller lists and, more importantly, people are using it the way it was intended: as an ongoing resource and reference vs a read-it-and-shelf-it.

Tony learned that writing a book is actually the easy part of ‘writing a book’. A book is not just a manuscript. It’s the design of a logo, the cover, the diagrams, the page layout. It’s publisher negotiation. Asking friends for quotes. PR and launch events. Social Media posts and Premium Placement across airport bookstores. But, this book was a thing worth making, so Tony assembled a team and they got to work. The result made bestseller lists and, more importantly, people are using it the way it was intended: as an ongoing resource and reference vs a read-it-and-shelf-it.

UNITS SOLD: New York Times & Wall Street Journal Bestseller

Building the future

Each creation informs the next. With these incredible products in the past, Tony eagerly looks to the future.

The team.

The number of people who worked on all these products literally cannot be counted. Tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands. Not just the designers and engineers and marketers, but people in manufacturing, those making chips and displays, mechanicals and plastics, batteries and packaging and more.

Teams in Korea, Taiwan, China, Japan, the US, Canada, the UK, France, Germany, Italy, just to name a few. Brains all over the world working all night and thinking nonstop and joining together to make something incredible.

Tony didn’t, couldn’t, make anything alone. It takes a team. It takes an army.


MEET THE BUILD TEAM
The crew from General Magic,
then and now(ish).
Meet the Build team polaroid 1
The crew from General Magic,
then and now(ish).
Our team when we launched the Philips Velo. Love those 90’s graphics.
Meet the Build team polaroid 2
Our team when we launched the Philips Velo. Love those 90’s graphics.
Just a few members of our team at Apple. Launch day of the original iPod was the last day we could all easily fit into one picture.
Meet the Build team polaroid 3
Just a few members of our team at Apple. Launch day of the original iPod was the last day we could all easily fit into one picture.
The team at Nest during product launches, environmental cleanups, and all-hands during the days when we could all just sit on the floor, eating Patrice’s lemon bars.
Meet the Build team polaroid 4
The team at Nest during product launches, environmental cleanups, and all-hands during the days when we could all just sit on the floor, eating Patrice’s lemon bars.
This is the Build Collective team. But we’re scattered across the world so we can never seem to get all of us in one picture.
Meet the Build team polaroid 5
This is the Build Collective team. But we’re scattered across the world so we can never seem to get all of us in one picture.

Teams in Korea, Taiwan, China, Japan, the US, Canada, the UK, France, Germany, Italy, just to name a few. Brains all over the world working all night and thinking nonstop and joining together to make something incredible.

Tony didn’t, couldn’t, make anything alone. It takes a team. It takes an army.


MEET THE BUILD TEAM
MEDIA

IN
THE
PRESS

MEDIA

IN HIS OWN WORDS

Hear and see Tony speaking at TED Talks, conferences and films.
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This is where it all comes together.

This book is everything Tony has learned, every explosive failure, every unexpected success, every team he’s built and product he’s dreamed up. Get it below or learn more.

Hardcover | E-book | Audiobook
For a limited time, you can get
 a signed copy of Build.
$40
USD
Buy now
The details
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