When Steve Jobs returned to Apple in 1997, the tech company he
co-founded more than two decades earlier was on the brink of failure.
During the final quarter of 1996, Apple's sales plummeted by 30 percent.
Microsoft was the dominant computer company in the market.
As Isaacson recalls in his biography on Jobs, a Fortune
magazine story from that time said this of the company: "Apple Computer,
Silicon Valley's paragon of dysfunctional management and fumbled
techno-dreams, is back in crisis mode, scrambling lugubriously in slow
motion to deal with imploding sales, a floundering technology strategy,
and a hemorrhaging brand name."
Fresh off a partnership deal with Microsoft that injected Apple with
$150 million, one of Jobs' first goals as CEO was to review the
company's sprawling product line. What he found out was that Apple had
been producing multiple versions of the same product to satisfy requests
from retailers. For instance, the company was selling a dozen varied
versions of the Macintosh computer.
Unable to explain why so many products were necessary, Jobs asked his
team of top managers, "Which ones do I tell my friends to buy?" When he
didn't get a simple answer, Jobs got to work reducing the number of
Apple products by 70 percent. Among the casualties was the Newton
digital personal assistant. Unfortunately, the cut-backs also resulted,
in part, in a workforce reduction of about 3,000 employees.
"Deciding what not to do is as important as deciding what to do,"
Jobs says in the book. "It's true for companies, and it's true for
products."
Moving forward, Jobs' strategy was to produce only four products: one
desktop and one portable device aimed at both consumers and
professionals. For professionals, Apple created the Power Macintosh G3
desktop and the PowerBook G3 portable computer. For consumers, there was
the iMac desktop and iBook portable computer. (According to Jobs, the
"i" emphasized that the devices were directly integrated with the
internet.)
The move to a smaller product line and a greater focus on quality and
innovation paid off. During Jobs' first fiscal year after his return,
ending in September 1997, Apple lost $1.04 billion and was "90 days from
being insolvent," Jobs says in the book. One year later, the company
turned a $309 million profit.
Jobs' plan also laid the groundwork for Apple's continued innovation.
The company introduced revolutionary products including the iPod
portable digital audio player in 2001, an online marketplace called the
Apple iTunes Store in 2003, the iPhone handset in 2007 and the iPad
tablet computer in 2010.