Nearly fifteen years as CEO of Apple.
From Robertsdale, Alabama, to Apple Park, California.
For fifteen years, Tim Cook
started each day the same way.
Open the email. Read the notes from people whose lives changed because of something Apple made.
These are some of them.
Tim Cook, in his own words:
"I get up at 3:45, and I'm at the gym by 5." · Axios on HBO, April 2018
Every email below is a real person.
Every story is linked to the news outlet that covered it.
The unlikely path from the Gulf Coast of Alabama to running the greatest company in the world.
Timothy Donald Cook was born in Mobile, Alabama, on November 1, 1960. His father worked at the shipyard. His mother worked at the drugstore. The family settled in a small town in Baldwin County called Robertsdale.
He played the trombone. He graduated salutatorian from Robertsdale High School in 1978. By his own account, as a teenager one night, he rode past a Black family's house and saw a cross burning on the lawn. He has said he shouted at the hooded men to stop, and one of them, he later learned, was a local church deacon. It's a story he has told in speeches for years, and it shaped everything after.
Auburn University, industrial engineering, 1982. Duke MBA, 1988, Fuqua Scholar, top ten percent of the class. Twelve years at IBM. Six months at Compaq.
Then Steve Jobs called.
No more than five minutes into my initial interview with Steve, I wanted to throw caution and logic to the wind and join Apple. Tim Cook · Auburn University Commencement · 2010
It was 1998. Apple had lost a billion dollars the year before. Steve had only recently come back. Every rational person in Tim's life told him to stay at Compaq. He went anyway.
He rapidly slashed Apple's inventory and rebuilt operations around just-in-time discipline. He closed factories. He moved manufacturing to Asia. He called inventory "fundamentally evil" and compared Apple's business to a dairy: you want to sell the milk while it's fresh. Apple was back to profit.
Chief Operating Officer by 2005. Stand-in CEO during Steve's medical leaves in 2004, 2009, and again in early 2011. He never lobbied for the job. He just kept the company running when the man everyone came to see couldn't be on stage.
On August 24, 2011, Steve handed him the keys.
I have always said if there ever came a day when I could no longer meet my duties and expectations as Apple's CEO, I would be the first to let you know. Unfortunately, that day has come. As far as my successor goes, I strongly recommend that we execute our succession plan and name Tim Cook as CEO of Apple. Steve Jobs · Resignation Letter · August 24, 2011
Forty-two days later, Steve was gone.
Tim wrote the memo no one wants to write. It was short. He never called Steve "Mr. Jobs," never "our founder." Just Steve. He signed with his first name, no title. And he ended with a promise: "We will honor his memory by dedicating ourselves to continuing the work he loved so much."
He kept it.
Six moments from fifteen years. The ones people will still be quoting in 2050.
A chronology of Apple keynotes from Tim's tenure,
with the lines he delivered on stage.
For the past 15 years I've started just about every morning the same way. I open my email and I read notes I received the day before from Apple's users all over the world.
You share little pieces of your lives with me and tell me things you want me to know about how Apple has touched you. About the moment your mom was saved by her Apple Watch. About the perfect selfie you captured at the summit of a mountain that seemed impossible to climb. You thank me for the ways Mac has changed what you can do at work and sometimes give me a hard time because something you care about isn't working like it should.
In every one of those emails I feel the beating heart of our shared humanity. I feel a sense of deepening obligation to work harder and push further. But most of all, I feel a gratitude that I cannot put into words, that I somehow got to be the person on the other end of those emails, the leader of a company that ignites imaginations and enriches lives in such profound ways it defies description. What an honor and a privilege it has been.
Today we announced that I'm taking the next step in my journey at Apple. Over the coming months I will be transitioning into a new role, leaving the CEO job behind in September and becoming Apple's executive chairman. A new person will be stepping into what I know in my heart is the best job in the world. That leader is John Ternus, a brilliant engineer and thinker who has spent the past 25 years building the Apple products our users love so much, obsessed with every detail, focused on every possible way we can make something better, bolder, more beautiful, and more meaningful. He is the perfect person for the job.
John cares so much about who we are at Apple, what we do at Apple, who we reach at Apple, and he has the heart and character to lead with extraordinary integrity. I am so proud to call him Apple's next CEO. This company will reach such incredible heights under his leadership, and you will feel his impact in every bit of delight and discovery that grows out of the products and services to come. I can't wait for you to get to know him like I do.
This is not goodbye. But at this moment of transition, I wanted to take the opportunity to say thank you. Not on behalf of the company, this time, though there is a wellspring of gratitude for you that overflows inside our walls. But simply on behalf of me. Tim. A person who grew up in a rural place in a different time and, for these magical moments, got to be the CEO of the greatest company in the world.
Thank you for the confidence and kindness you've shown me. Thank you for saying hi to me on the street and in our stores. Thank you for cheering alongside me when we unveiled a new product or service. Thank you, most of all, for believing in me to lead the company that has always put you at the center of our work. Every day we get up and think about what we can do to make your life a little bit better. And every day, you've made mine the best I could have asked for.
Thank You

For fifteen years, Apple has shown up in hospitals, in kitchens, in airports, in the hands of a non-verbal kid typing their first sentence. Every morning at 3:45, Tim reads about it, and cares what's there.
We can't deliver these to him. But if you send one, we'll publish it right here on this page, with your name, where everyone can read it.
Write something. We'll publish it on this page with your name. That's all we can promise, but it's a lot for a celebration.
John Ternus becomes Apple's next CEO on September 1, 2026. Penn mechanical engineering, class of 1997. He joined Apple in 2001 and has led hardware engineering since 2021, including iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple Watch, AirPods, Vision Pro, and the transition to Apple Silicon.
"John has the mind of an engineer, the soul of an innovator, and the heart to lead with integrity and with honor."
Tim Cook · April 20, 2026"A person who grew up in a rural place in a different time and, for these magical moments, got to be the CEO of the greatest company in the world."
Tim Cook · April 20, 2026
Thank you.