Apple Bets New CEO John Ternus Will Bring Back Jobs-Era Decisiveness

When Apple Inc. announced Monday that longtime leader Tim Cook would be replaced by John Ternus, it published an image of the two executives walking side by side at the company’s campus in Cupertino, California.

Both men are wearing Apple Watches, dark button-up shirts and blue jeans as they smile at each other — a near mirror image. The implication: Ternus, Apple’s hardware head, will bring continuity as chief executive officer and help preserve Cook’s legacy.

But Ternus will have a challenge when he officially takes the job in September. Even as he maintains Apple’s device empire — and its more than $400 billion in annual revenue — the executive will need to take chances, enter new product categories and find the company’s footing in artificial intelligence.

None of that will be easy, and the ability to “think different” will determine whether Apple can keep thriving in the AI era.

“He must resist the temptation of incrementalism that has plagued Apple of late,” Forrester Research Inc. analyst Dipanjan Chatterjee said in a note. “As Ternus assumes the helm, he must define Apple’s future as ferociously as he defends its past.”