After Steve Jobs, Apple reached the pinnacle of success under the leadership of Tim Cook. Now, the company is set to enter the post-Tim Cook era after 15 years.
Apple’s current CEO era is set to end on September 1, 2026, and he will be replaced by Apple’s longtime hardware boss John Ternes. Cook will retain the post of executive chairman.
The company’s major setback has raised many questions related to Apple’s future, from product innovation, market development and AI strategy.
product innovation
The biggest question is what will come after the iPhone. No one can deny Cook’s impressive business strategies, extending the success of the iPhone to products like the Apple Watch and AirPods, and building a strong services business. Cook also increased Apple’s market cap from $350 billion to $4 trillion.
John Ternes is now stepping into a major leadership role, pledging to maintain the “values ​​and vision” established at Apple over the past 50 years.
A mechanical engineer by profession, Turnus has been the “product guy” behind the scenes for various products including AirPods, iPod, ultra-thin iPhone Air, MacBook Neo, and M-series chips.
He is known for prioritizing user experience over technical specifications.
“We never think about shipping any technology,” he said in a recent interview with technology review site Tom’s Guide.
“We’re always thinking about how we can leverage technology to ship amazing products,” Ternes said.
Now, it remains to be seen whether Apple will lose its “innovative spirit” or double down on hardware perfection.
John Turnus’s big test: AI integration
Undoubtedly, Tim Cook has turned Apple into one of the most valuable companies in the world based on the success of the iPhones and other products.
However, the story of AI lag still persists and is being felt at Apple. In 2024, Tim Cook advocated a bold future for Apple Intelligence, a personal AI capable of drawing answers from a user’s digital life while maintaining non-violable privacy protections.
Unfortunately, he faced difficulty in turning this vision into reality. Even a completely revamped Siri is expected to be released later this year.
The company is believed to be lagging behind Google and OpenAI when it comes to generative AI. Even the company was hesitant to build a foundational AI model, relying on Google’s Gemini and Siri to upgrade the products’ features.
In January, Bloomberg also reported that the company plans to accelerate the development of three upcoming AI wearables powered by Siri, such as pendants, smart glasses, and AirPods with cameras.
But users are increasingly turning to third-party developers to get their AI fix on the platform.
Timothy Hubbard, assistant professor of management at the University of Notre Dame, said, “By choosing a hardware leader in John Turnus, Apple may signal that it still believes the future of AI will run through tightly integrated devices rather than just software.”
Therefore, it now falls to John Ternes to integrate AI into the company’s future plans. He will have to think about the company’s approach to whether it wants to pursue the existing privacy-first approach or whether it will embrace AI-powered personalization.
“I expect their biggest challenge and efforts will be focused on getting a better AI story and putting together an offering that relies more on Apple’s own capabilities and less on third parties,” said Bob O’Donnell, head of tech consulting firm Technalysis Research. Reuters.
