How three young Californians built the most profitable consumer technology company in history, invented categories that did not exist, and turned a near-bankruptcy in 1997 into the first $3 trillion market cap in corporate history.
It started in a garage at 2066 Crist Drive, Los Altos, California. Steve Jobs was 21 years old, Steve Wozniak was 25, and Ronald Wayne was 41. On April 1, 1976, they signed the founding documents for Apple Computer Company. Wayne drew the original logo, a sepia-toned illustration of Isaac Newton under an apple tree. He sold his 10% stake weeks later for $800, one of the most expensive decisions in the history of human commerce.
The early product was the Apple I, a bare circuit board that Wozniak had designed himself. It was not a consumer product. It was a kit for electronics hobbyists. Jobs, however, saw something different: he saw a mass-market computer for ordinary people. He convinced a local electronics store to sell 50 units at $500 each, hand-assembled in his family's garage. That instinct for the mass market over the technical elite would define Apple for the next fifty years.
ALSO READ: Dow Futures Fall Amid Inflation and Middle East War FearsThe Apple II, launched in 1977, was a complete departure from the kit approach. It came in a plastic case, included a colour display interface, and worked with standard monitors and cassette tape storage. It was designed to sit on a desk in a home or small office. It was the first mass-market personal computer to achieve genuine commercial success, selling over six million units between 1977 and 1993.
VisiCalc, the first spreadsheet software, launched exclusively on the Apple II in 1979, and almost single-handedly justified the purchase of a personal computer for business use. Apple's revenue exploded. The company went public on December 12, 1980, in what was at the time the largest US initial public offering since Ford Motor Company in 1956. Steve Jobs became a paper millionaire at 25.
"Here's to the crazy ones. The misfits. The rebels. The troublemakers. The round pegs in the square holes." Apple Think Different Campaign, 1997
On January 24, 1984, Apple launched the Macintosh during Super Bowl XVIII with a television advertisement directed by Ridley Scott that is still considered the most influential commercial ever made. The Macintosh was the first mass-market personal computer with a graphical user interface and a mouse. IBM and Microsoft had dominated with text-based command lines. Apple showed the world that computers could be operated by pointing and clicking. That insight, borrowed and developed from Xerox PARC research, changed human interaction with technology permanently.
By 1985, internal power struggles had pushed Steve Jobs out of his own company. Jobs departed in September 1985 and founded NeXT Computer. Under subsequent CEOs, Apple launched a bewildering array of products, including the Newton personal digital assistant, multiple Mac lines, and a series of licensing deals that diluted the brand. By 1997, Apple had 90 days of cash remaining. Industry analysts openly predicted its collapse.
In December 1996, Apple acquired NeXT for $429 million, bringing Jobs back as an advisor. He was named interim CEO in September 1997, a role he dropped the "interim" from in 2000. His immediate moves were brutal: he cut Apple's product line from 350 items to 10, cancelled the Newton, and ended the Mac licensing program. Apple posted a $309 million profit in 1998, its first profitable year in years. The turnaround was complete within 12 months of Jobs' return.
| Year | Revenue (USD) | Key Driver |
|---|---|---|
| 1980 | $117 million | Apple II, IPO |
| 1990 | $5.6 billion | Macintosh Line |
| 1998 | $5.9 billion | iMac relaunch |
| 2004 | $8.3 billion | iPod, iTunes Store |
| 2008 | $32.5 billion | iPhone, App Store |
| 2012 | $156 billion | iPhone 4S, iPad |
| 2018 | $265 billion | iPhone X supercycle |
| 2022 | $394 billion | iPhone 14, Services |
| 2024 | $391 billion | iPhone 15, Apple Intelligence |
On January 9, 2007, Steve Jobs walked onto the Macworld stage in San Francisco and announced that Apple was introducing three products: a widescreen iPod with touch controls, a revolutionary mobile phone, and a breakthrough internet communicator. Then he revealed they were all the same device: the iPhone. The audience erupted. The mobile industry was never the same.
The iPhone did not invent the smartphone. It reinvented what a smartphone could be. It replaced the physical keyboard with a glass touchscreen. It launched the App Store in 2008, creating an entirely new economy of software developers. It consolidated the phone, camera, music player, and internet browser into a single object. By 2010, Apple was the largest mobile device company by revenue on Earth. By 2022, the iPhone had generated over $1 trillion in cumulative revenue, making it the best-selling consumer product in history by a significant margin.
According to BBC Technology, the iPhone's App Store ecosystem had generated over $1.1 trillion in developer billings and sales by 2022, representing one of the most consequential platform businesses ever constructed.
ALSO READ: Europe Stocks Drop as Energy Prices Spike Over Iran WarSteve Jobs died on October 5, 2011, at age 56. Tim Cook, Apple's Chief Operating Officer since 1998, had been running day-to-day operations through Jobs' medical leaves and was named CEO in August 2011. The transition raised profound questions: could Apple innovate without Jobs, or would it settle into the role of a premium hardware company coasting on his legacy?
The Cook era delivered a different kind of greatness. Apple did not invent breakthrough new categories at Jobs' pace, but it executed with extraordinary efficiency. Cook transformed Apple's supply chain into the most efficient in consumer electronics history, diversified revenue into Services at enormous scale, launched Apple Watch to dominate the wearables category, and oversaw a share buyback program of over $600 billion, the largest in corporate history, which drove the stock from $55 in 2011 to over $220 by 2024. Under Cook, Apple's market cap grew from $350 billion to $3 trillion.
In November 2020, Apple launched the M1 chip, its first processor designed in-house for Mac computers. The M1 delivered performance per watt that shocked the industry, outperforming Intel processors that had powered Macs for 15 years while using a fraction of the power. Within 18 months, the entire Mac lineup had transitioned to Apple Silicon. The performance advantage proved so significant that it triggered a Mac sales renaissance after years of flat growth.
The M-series chips, now in their fourth generation with M4, represent Apple's most strategically important long-term move since the iPhone. By designing its own processors, Apple controls the most critical component in its products, can optimise hardware and software together at a level no competitor can match, and has eliminated its dependence on Intel's roadmap. The same chip architecture now powers iPhone, iPad, Mac, and Apple Vision Pro, creating a unified silicon ecosystem that reinforces the lock-in of the Apple platform.
Apple's revenue model has evolved dramatically over four decades. In the 1990s, it was almost entirely dependent on Mac hardware sales. Today, it operates four primary revenue streams. iPhone accounts for roughly 52% of total revenue, the single largest product category in consumer electronics. Mac and iPad together contribute approximately 15%. Wearables, including Apple Watch and AirPods, add another 10%, a category that did not exist before 2015. Services, the fastest-growing and highest-margin segment, now contributes roughly 25% of revenue and is growing at approximately 12-15% annually.
The Services business is Apple's most powerful strategic asset going forward. Once an iPhone is purchased, the customer is drawn into the App Store, iCloud, Apple Music, Apple TV+, Apple Pay, and Apple Fitness+. Each additional service deepens retention, raises switching costs, and generates recurring high-margin revenue. The average Apple customer pays Apple roughly $50-60 per year in services on top of hardware, a figure that continues to rise.
According to Reuters, Apple's gross margin on Services exceeds 70%, compared to roughly 36% for hardware products, which explains why the company has so aggressively expanded this segment under Tim Cook.
ALSO READ: Trump Fires Kristi Noem as DHS SecretaryApple's entry into AI, branded as Apple Intelligence, was announced at WWDC 2024 and rolled out through iOS 18. Unlike competitors who built cloud-first AI assistants, Apple focused on on-device processing, using the neural engines in A17 and M-series chips to run AI models locally, preserving user privacy. The integration with ChatGPT for more complex queries sparked debate about Apple's own AI capabilities, but the privacy-first positioning resonated strongly with Apple's core audience.
The strategic question for Apple in this AI era is whether its on-device approach, rooted in chip advantage and privacy, can compete with the cloud-scale AI that Google, Microsoft, and Amazon are deploying. The answer will likely define Apple's trajectory for the entire second half of this decade. Apple Vision Pro, launched in 2024 at $3,499, represents another frontier bet: spatial computing as the next platform after the smartphone.
Apple's immediate focus is Apple Intelligence expansion across more markets and languages, the iPhone 17 cycle, and demonstrating that Vision Pro can evolve from a developer curiosity into a genuine new platform.
The longer-term strategic battleground is services growth in emerging markets, particularly India, where Apple is investing heavily in retail and manufacturing. An India that mirrors even a fraction of China's contribution to Apple revenue would add tens of billions in annual sales.
Watch: iPhone 17 launch, Apple Intelligence global rollout, Vision Pro second generation, and India manufacturing expansion progress through 2025-2026.
