Jony Ive, a close creative collaborator with Apple Inc
co-founder Steve Jobs whose iPhone and other designs fuelled Apple’s
rise to a $1 trillion company, will leave later this year to form an
independent design company.
Apple
said Ive will continue work on its products at his new venture, but
shares fell as much as 1.5% to $197.44 in after-market trading, wiping
about $9 billion from the firm’s value.
APPLE DESIGN
Ive
spent nearly three decades at Apple, leading the design of the
candy-coloured iMacs that helped Apple re-emerge from near death in the
1990s to the iPhone, regarded by some experts as one of the most
successful consumer products of all time.
“It’s
the most significant departure of somebody who was a core part of the
growth story” under Jobs, said Ben Bajarin, analyst with Creative
Strategies.
Ive joined Apple in 1992 and led Apple’s design teams since 1996. He became chief design officer in 2015.
Ive’s new company will be called LoveFrom, the Financial Times
reported, quoting Ive as saying it would be based in California “for
now.” Ive told the newspaper he would work on Apple devices in addition
to unspecified “personal passions” and non-Apple projects.
“I
have the utmost confidence in my designer colleagues at Apple, who
remain my closest friends, and I look forward to working with them for
many years to come,” Ive said.
Ive’s
departure comes amid falling iPhone sales, including a record drop in
Apple’s most recent quarter. Sales of some newer hardware products such
as the Apple Watch and its wireless AirPods headphones are expanding,
but Apple has turned its attention to growing its services business,
which includes Apple Music and iCloud.
Nehal
Chokshi, an analyst with Maxim Group, said that despite Ive’s key role
in Apple history, his departure will not hurt the iPhone maker.
“I
would view it as Jony Ive looking to get paid market rates for his
design expertise from Apple, with the right to allow other companies -
not competitors to Apple - to leverage that expertise,” Chokshi said.
CONTINUITY AFTER JOBS
Jobs
deeply involved himself in Apple’s design process, sometimes visiting
Apple’s design studios daily to offer Ive feedback. Chief Executive Tim
Cook, to whom Ive now reports, has not done the same.
After
Jobs’ death, pundits questioned whether Apple could continue Jobs’ pace
of new products. Ive became a symbol of continuity, bridging the Jobs
and Cook eras.
But Alan Cannistraro,
chief executive of online video discovery platform Rheo who previously
worked at Apple for a dozen years, said Apple employees knew Ive had
taken on fewer day-to-day design duties in the past several years.
Around 2015, Cannistraro would often see Ive at a high-end fitness gym
on Market Street in San Francisco doing mid-morning workouts.
“When I would see him there, two days a week or more, that just told me he had taken a step back,” Cannistraro said.
Ive
came to oversee both hardware and software design at Apple, but the
company laid the groundwork for his departure over several years. During
2015, Ive handed off some duties to other executives while he finished
Apple’s new corporate headquarters, Apple Park.
One
of those executives was Alan Dye, who Apple on Thursday said will
become vice president of human interface design. The company appointed
Evans Hankey as vice president of industrial design. Both have “played
key leadership roles” in Apple’s design team for years, the company
said.
STRONG DESIGN
Cannistraro,
the former Apple employee, said Hankey stood out as “exceptional” among
Apple’s already strong design teams. Around 2008, as Apple readied new
iMacs, Hankey dug in on an idea to make Apple products talk to each
other as a home control system.
The
effort, which was never released, was not part of Hankey’s official
duties. But she took an interest anyway because of her “very long-term
vision kind of role – looking for seeds that could turn into something
bigger, or maybe plant some seeds, too,” Cannistraro said.
The
elevation of Dye and Hankey could reignite the connection between
Apple’s design teams and senior executives. Both will report to Chief
Operating Officer Jeff Williams, who will in turn hand off logistics and
supply chain duties to Sabih Khan, newly named senior vice president of
operations.
Meantime, Williams, who
oversaw development of the Apple Watch, “will spend more of his time
working with the design team in their studio,” Apple said.
Williams
has gained clout in Apple’s product development process, but that does
not necessarily mean he is poised to become chief executive in the near
future, Maxim Group’s Chokshi said.
“I don’t see Tim Cook retiring anytime soon,” Chokshi said.
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