Bill Gates in 1989 On His Hiring Process, Microsoft's Seattle Area Office

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In a 1989 NBC "Today Show" interview, Bill Gates explains why he chose not to locate his company in Silicon Valley. He also shares what he was looking for in job candidates. At the time, Microsoft had just over 4,000 employees.

If you wanted a job with Microsoft at the height of the personal computer revolution, you only needed to display two qualities — at least, that's what Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates told NBC's "Today" show in 1989.

Gates, who was then just 33 years old and still CEO of the tech giant, told NBC's Jane Pauley that job candidates' age and experience were less important than their enthusiasm for work and their belief in making computers more accessible for the average person.

"Well, we'll hire people at any age as long as they're super energetic and they want to make personal computers easier to use," Gates says before admitting that most new Microsoft employees were on the younger side. "But, we end up hiring mostly people right out of college or business school."

Of course, new hires also needed "to be smart before they come in," Gates adds, but Microsoft also wanted bright, but malleable, candidates who could be easily trained. "We give them a lot of training on the job, we put them right to work," he says. "But, no, we don't expect that they know a lot about [the work] before they get there."

In other words, in 1989, Microsoft didn't exactly expect every job candidate to be as adept at writing software as the company's co-founders — Gates and Paul Allen developed the programming language software that launched Microsoft in 1975. New hires were expected to be smart, enthusiastic and ready to learn.

Gates also tells Pauley why the company was headquartered in the Seattle area instead of Silicon Valley.

First, said Gates, "I grew up in Seattle, so as soon as my company had over 20 people, I decided to move it back here." (He and Paul Allen co-founded the company in Albuquerque, New Mexico.)

But also, "in California, in Silicon Valley, ... a lot of things happen but the rumor mill makes it hard to keep secrets and employees switch from company to company," he says. In Seattle, "we're able to keep our secrets and, you know, be really on our own," Gates says in the interview.

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Bill Gates in 1989 On His Hiring Process, Microsoft's Seattle Area Office
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With those Windows he's wearing it's no wonder he can see the future.

zoecarlibur
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He still sound the same at age 33 to now

quitypopper
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The right employee can make you millions while the wrong one can cost you millions of dollars and a lot of headaches!

calvinraab
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Ahh, back in the day when companies were willing to teach the less experienced. Now you have to know javascript, python, html/css just to get your application in the system.

snxprem
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I am 33 year old watching this guy in YouTube with snacks and thinking someone will hire me. 😂

coolyoutuber
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when it's rainy, people work hard, lol

YumianDeng
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Oh wow, so the benefit of being in Seattle was to feel safe from Silicon valley competition? Interesting stuff.

Mirsab
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"We don't expect that they know a lot about it when they get there..." Imagine getting a great job without at least 3-5 years prior experience doing the exact same job your applying for.

gypsygib
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Gates: Seattle is a great place
2020: [hold my beer]

RadicalNuance
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now they expect you to have 10 years of experience in HTML, CSS, Javascript, and Python and be under the age of 20

westernpigeon
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Wtf how was he that insightful at that time.

Acumen
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It looks like this guy may be success one day

enyhbgi
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Somehow he speaks every time in the same way no matter if he is 60 or 30 hmm interesting

denissssss
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When its raining people work hard. So True.

btvaalburg
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It is really a great thing that CNBC is focusing more on his business past. He truly is a brilliant man but I think he is capable of doing really great things that require real drive and energy but instead he spends his time doing philanthropic work.

vedantkale
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Bezos definitely watched this interview. Haha

jefflombardi
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This is the best Seattle ad I've watched in my life

djderie
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How?! He looks like he hasn’t even finished puberty, what is this mans genes

seanjenkins
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In Seattle when it is raining people work hard. In my country when it is raining people take off from work.

selfstudypk
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I always imagined that Silicon Valley didn't exist until like 10-15 years ago.

mudzibaba