Apple has announced that John Ternus, senior vice president of Hardware Engineering, will become Apple’s next chief executive officer, effective on September 1, 2026. Tim Cook will step down from his current role and become executive chairman of Apple’s board of directors, marking the end of a distinguished career leading one of the world’s most beloved and valuable brands.

Steve Jobs was never going to be an easy act to follow, yet Tim Cook took Jobs’ legacy and transformed Apple into a durable, resilient financial powerhouse with explosive market-cap growth. Cook’s legacy will be defined by steady, disciplined operational stewardship—proof that a company can be more than just exciting and visionary; it can also be immensely valuable to all its stakeholders.

Yet while Cook has kept Apple’s growth trajectory moving at a steady clip, he has not overseen a step-change innovation that would reset Apple’s competitive position for the next two decades, as Jobs did with the iPhone. For now, Apple remains structurally dependent on the phone form factor as it searches for its next growth engine.

That’s where John Ternus comes in. Ternus is a hardware engineer, which signals that Apple will seek differentiation in its physical products even as it looks to reframe the device as a substrate for intelligent experiences.  Ternus represents a quiet pivot back toward product intimacy, a tighter coupling between hardware, software, and emerging AI capabilities.

The baton will pass effortlessly to Ternus, an insider. But he must resist the temptation of incrementalism that has plagued Apple of late and escape the iPhone’s gravitational pull in his quest for the next disruptive form factor. As Ternus assumes the helm, he must define Apple’s future as ferociously as he defends its past.

Read my post on Apple’s future: Apple Turns 50. Now Comes The Reckoning.

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