He is best known for being CEO of one of the world’s largest companies.
But before Tim Cook took the reins at Apple, he started his career in a very surprising place.
Speaking on the Table Manners podcast, Mr Cook revealed that he started working when he was just 11 years old.
He says: ‘A lot of [his upbringing] was centred on work and the belief that hard work was essential for everybody, regardless of your age.
‘And so I started working when I was probably 11 or 12 on the paper route.’
After years spent ‘throwing papers’, Mr Cook says he ‘graduated’ to his next job flipping burgers for a local restaurant at the age of 14.
‘I worked at a place called Tastee Freez. It was the only fast-food place in town, and so everybody congregated there,’ he explained to Jessie and Lennie Ware.
‘I wore a little hat, and I wore an apron, and I was making $1.10 an hour at the time, it was sub-minimum wage, which was legal at that point in time.’
While he is now known for being the leader of one of the world’s biggest companies, Apple CEO Tim Cook (pictured) started his career in a more humble position
Tim Cook grew up in the rural area of Robertsdale, Alabama, which had a population of just 2,000 people at the time. Tim says his first ever job was delivering papers, a job he started aged just 11. Pictured: Tim Cook in his high school yearbook
Tim Cook was born in 1960 to Geraldine and Don Cook in the city of Mobile, Alabama.
However, the family later settled in Robertsdale, which, although technically a city, had a population of just over 2,000 at the time.
Mr Cook says: ‘I came from an extremely modest background in a rural town with two, three thousand people in it, so it was a blink and you’ll miss it kind of place.
‘But it was terrific. The house was filled with love and everybody knew everybody in town and what everybody was doing. And so it was a very different upbringing.’
It was in Robertsdale that Mr Cook got his first jobs delivering papers and flipping burgers while attending the local high school.
Later, according to the Mobile Press-Register, he worked at Robertsdale’s Lee Drug Store with his mother.
While the Tastee Freez where Mr Cook got his first taste of gainful employment is no longer open, the Lee Drugstore is still the city’s only independent pharmacy.
At high school, Mr Cook reportedly played trombone in the band and served on the yearbook staff.
After spending a few years ‘throwing papers’, Mr Cook says he ‘graduated’ to flipping burgers at a local restaurant called Tastee Freez, a chain of burger and ice cream stores which still has a few locations in the US
During this time, Mr Cook also worked on the high school yearbook as the business manager in his senior year. Pictured: Mr Cook in his high school yearbook, class of 1978
In a hint of his future business success, the young Mr Cook even served as the yearbook’s business manager during his senior year and was responsible for selling adverts to local businesses.
It was those years growing up in rural Alabama which Mr Cook says taught him the value of hard work.
‘They [his parents] instilled hard work. And that has stayed with me for a lifetime, the value of it, the fact that work can be a part of your purpose,’ says Mr Cook.
‘I think before Apple, I think I loved to work. I didn’t love the work, and now I love both. And there’s a big difference that you feel when you do that.’
After graduating from Auburn University, where he saw his first personal computer, Mr Cook worked at a number of tech companies including IBM before Steve Jobs invited him to join Apple in 1998.
He says: ‘I worked with Steve for 13 years before he passed in 2011. That was a very, very sad time. I thought he would always be there, and that’s not how things worked out.’
Now, as CEO of Apple, Mr Cook says that he still employs those hardworking values he learned as a child – including one habit that would have been useful on his early-morning paper route.
The tech leader says the one thing he has always stuck with is to start the day at 5 am.
Since graduating from Auburn University, Mr Cook has gone on to become one of the world’s most well-known businessmen and has even met King Charles III (pictured). However, he attributes his hardworking attitude to his parents and ‘extremely modest’ upbringing
In previous interviews, he has said that he uses the time to answer some of the 500-600 emails he gets each day.
Those include emails sent in by the many happy, or extremely unhappy, Apple customers who reach out to him on a daily basis.
He says: ‘It’s the part of the day that I can control the most. As the day starts to unfold, it becomes less predictable, and by the end of the day, all these things can commandeer your time and intention and energy.
‘And so I love the part of the day that I can kind of block out the world and focus on a few critical things and just be silent for a while.’
This article was originally published by a www.dailymail.co.uk . Read the Original article here. .