The Engineer Who Owns the Product: Why John Ternus Is the Right CEO for the Next Apple
John Ternus spent 25 years making Apple’s hardware the envy of the industry. Now he has to run the whole company.
On March 4, 2026, Apple held a product event in New York City to unveil the MacBook Neo, a $599 laptop, the most affordable Mac the company had ever sold. Tim Cook was not there. John Ternus was. He did the reveal, worked the room, and the following morning appeared on Good Morning America to talk up the device, the kind of media appearance Cook had typically reserved for himself.
That sequence was not accidental. It was Apple telling you, as plainly as a famously cryptic company ever tells you anything, who comes next. Today it became official: Ternus will become Apple’s eighth CEO on September 1, 2026, with Cook shifting to executive chairman. The succession was described in Apple’s press release as the result of a “thoughtful, long-term succession planning process.” That is technically accurate and also understates the story considerably.
The fuller story is that Ternus has spent 25 years building Apple’s hardware from the inside, survived the most significant quality crisis of the post-Jobs era, led the most consequential platform transition in Apple’s history, and arrived at this moment as the executive most trusted not just by the board but by the engineers who actually build the products. Understanding why he was chosen requires understanding what he built, what he broke, and how he handled both.
We also go deep on Ternus in a special podcast episode covering Apple's full leadership transition — listen here.