The Transition That Reveals a Structural Tension
Apple confirmed this week that John Ternus will succeed Tim Cook as CEO, stepping into a leadership role defined by two competing inheritances. Cook built Apple into one of the most profitable services businesses in history, converting hardware margins into subscription revenue at scale. Ternus, a hardware engineer by training and disposition, now governs a company whose organizational identity and whose Wall Street valuation depend on resolving a tension that Cook never fully resolved: whether Apple is a device platform or a services coordination layer. The AI era is forcing the answer.
This is not primarily a story about product strategy. It is a story about organizational schema. The question of what Apple is determines what competencies the organization cultivates, how it structures internal communication, and how it interprets competitive threats. When those structural assumptions are wrong or outdated, the organization continues executing with high efficiency toward objectives that no longer match the environment. That is the more serious governance problem Ternus inherits.
Routine Expertise at the Top of the Platform Stack
Hatano and Inagaki (1986) drew a distinction between routine expertise and adaptive expertise that has become useful well beyond its original educational context. Routine experts perform with high reliability inside familiar problem structures. Adaptive experts recognize when the problem structure itself has changed and adjust their underlying schema accordingly. The distinction matters here because Cook's tenure produced extraordinary routine expertise at the level of organizational process: supply chain optimization, services bundling, App Store governance, and margin extraction. These are genuine competencies. They are also largely procedural, calibrated to an environment where Apple defined the terms of platform participation.
The AI transition changes the problem structure. Kellogg, Valentine, and Christin (2020) argue that algorithmic systems do not simply automate tasks - they restructure the coordination environment itself, shifting where value is created and who captures it. Apple's App Store governance model, built on a gating logic that assumes users need Apple as an intermediary to access quality software, is now meeting an environment where AI agents increasingly mediate that access directly. The structural feature of the platform - controlled distribution in exchange for trust and curation - is under substitution pressure from a coordination mechanism that bypasses the gate entirely.
The Cal AI Removal as Diagnostic Evidence
Apple's removal of Cal AI from the App Store this week, reported by TechCrunch, is worth reading as organizational evidence rather than as a straightforward consumer protection story. Apple's stated justification cited deceptive billing and manipulative subscription tactics. Those violations may be accurate. But the enforcement action also reveals something about how Apple is currently interpreting its governance role: as a procedural enforcer of existing rules rather than as a strategic actor reconsidering what the platform's coordination function should be in an AI-mediated environment.
This is the topology versus topography problem I have written about elsewhere in different contexts. Knowing the shape of platform constraints differs from knowing how to navigate an environment where those constraints are losing structural validity. Apple's App Store rules were written for a world where the application was the primary unit of user value. AI agents complicate that unit. When an AI layer sits between the user and the application, the App Store's jurisdictional assumptions become unstable. Enforcing the old rules with precision is not the same as understanding the new structural environment.
What Ternus's Engineering Background Does and Does Not Solve
There is a reasonable argument that a hardware engineer leading Apple is well-positioned to think about AI at the device layer, where Apple has defensible architectural advantages in its silicon stack. The argument is that Ternus brings schema that is better suited to the physical coordination layer than to the services abstraction layer Cook optimized. This may be true as far as it goes.
The deeper challenge is that adaptive expertise at the individual level does not automatically transfer to organizational schema. Gentner (1983) showed that structural analogical reasoning - the kind that enables transfer across problem domains - depends on correctly identifying relational structure, not surface features. Ternus's hardware intuition may give him accurate structural models of device-level AI integration. Whether that maps correctly onto the organizational coordination problem of governing a platform during a period of schema disruption is a separate question. Organizations, unlike individuals, do not update their schemas through insight. They update through restructured incentives, communication patterns, and role definitions - changes that take considerably longer than a leadership announcement.
The Governance Implication
The business press coverage of the Apple CEO transition has focused almost entirely on product categories: what devices Ternus will prioritize, whether Apple Intelligence will close the gap with competitors, and how the services revenue line will hold. These are real questions. But they are topographic questions about navigation within a current structure. The more consequential question is whether Apple's organizational schema - its internal model of what coordination problem the company exists to solve - is due for revision. Rahman (2021) argued that platform governance structures create invisible constraints on worker and participant behavior through architectural design rather than explicit rule enforcement. Apple is now experiencing a version of that dynamic from the platform owner's position: the architecture it built is generating constraints on its own strategic options. Ternus will need more than procedural excellence to work through that. He will need schema induction at the organizational level, and that is considerably harder to achieve.
Roger Hunt