What Steve Jobs Would Think of Tim Cook’s Apple

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Steve Jobs personally chose Tim Cook as his successor and spent years preparing him for the role. In Walter Isaacson’s biography and subsequent accounts, Jobs made it clear that Cook should not try to imitate him but instead “do the right thing” and be the best version of himself. More than a decade after Jobs’ passing, Apple under Cook has grown into a financial and operational colossus. Yet the company’s trajectory also reveals a fundamental shift in style and ambition. If Jobs were alive today, his verdict would likely be a mixture of deep pride and impatient frustration.

### The Scale Jobs Dreamed Of

Jobs would almost certainly be astonished and pleased by the sheer size and resilience Apple has achieved. When he stepped down in 2011, Apple’s market capitalization hovered around $350 billion. Under Cook it has surpassed $4 trillion at peaks, with annual revenue climbing from roughly $108 billion to well over $400 billion. The services business alone now generates more than $100 billion a year.

Cook executed flawlessly on the operational strengths Jobs already valued him for: supply-chain mastery, global scale (especially in China), and relentless efficiency. The transition to Apple Silicon delivered one of the most successful architectural shifts in tech history, freeing Apple from Intel’s limitations and delivering dramatic performance and battery-life gains. Products like the Apple Watch and AirPods expanded the ecosystem intelligently and profitably. The iPhone itself evolved into an even stronger cash engine with higher average selling prices.

Jobs obsessively wanted Apple to become an enduring institution rather than a one-man show. In that respect, Cook has delivered beyond expectations. The company did not freeze or decline after its founder’s death—the fate Jobs explicitly feared, having witnessed it at Disney. Instead, it became more powerful and stable.

### The Missing “Insanely Great” Leap

Yet Jobs was, above all, a product visionary who lived for category-defining breakthroughs: the Macintosh, iPod, iPhone, and iPad. He thrived on disruption and intuition. Cook’s Apple, by contrast, has excelled at iteration, refinement, and monetization. The hardware roadmap has been evolutionary rather than revolutionary. While reliable and high-quality, few releases since the original iPhone have carried the same sense of magic or “one more thing” surprise.

Vision Pro, for all its technical ambition, remains a high-priced niche product rather than a mass-market platform. The autonomous car project was ultimately canceled. Critics inside and outside the company have noted a heavier reliance on the iPhone and services revenue, with big new bets sometimes seeming slower or more cautious. Jobs would likely have pushed harder and faster in artificial intelligence, augmented reality, or entirely new categories. He might have viewed some decisions as too finance-driven or consensus-oriented rather than taste-driven.

### Culture, Focus, and Philosophy

Jobs was famously demanding, mercurial, and laser-focused on product excellence above all else. Cook has maintained Apple’s emphasis on design, simplicity, and premium positioning, but the internal culture has inevitably changed—becoming more collaborative, process-oriented, and less founder-centric. Jobs might have bristled at certain external controversies, App Store battles, regulatory pressures, or what he would have seen as distractions from the core mission.

At the same time, he was pragmatic enough to recognize that his own intense, intuition-heavy style was not sustainable for a multi-trillion-dollar company employing hundreds of thousands of people. That is precisely why he chose Cook.

### A Founder’s Verdict

Steve Jobs would probably look at today’s Apple with genuine admiration for its strength, profitability, and global reach. He would see billions of satisfied users and an ecosystem more deeply entrenched than ever. The “ding in the universe” has grown louder in financial and operational terms.

But he would also be restless. He would want bolder risks, sharper product intuition, and the next revolutionary device or platform. In the end, the highest praise one can give Tim Cook is that he proved Apple could thrive without Steve Jobs’ daily presence—exactly what Jobs intended when he handed over the reins.

As Cook moves into the Executive Chairman role and new leadership takes the CEO seat, the long-term test of Jobs’ succession plan continues. The empire is stronger than ever. The question that would keep Jobs up at night is whether the next chapter will still be capable of magic.

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