Ole Lehmann Profile picture
Dec 26, 2024 22 tweets 9 min read Read on X
When Apple begged Steve Jobs to return in 1997, he had 90 days to save it from bankruptcy.

Everyone in Silicon Valley called it a suicide mission.

But Steve proved them all wrong.

It's the comeback story of the century and every entrepreneur must know how he did it 🧵: Image
Jobs, who'd been forced out in 1985, returned to a barely alive Apple in 1997.

After years of mismanagement, the company was worth just $3B (to Microsoft's $148B). Apple stock hit a 12-year low.

Michael Dell's advice?

"Shut it down and give the money back to the shareholders." Image
Image
But Jobs had other plans.

His first move shocked Silicon Valley:

Jobs negotiated a $150M investment from arch-rival Microsoft.

"We need all the help we can get," he told the Macworld 1997 audience (who boo'd him).

The deal bought Apple crucial time, but would it be enough?
With immediate cash flow concerns addressed, Jobs turned his attention to Apple's sprawling and messy product line.

The company was producing a dozen different versions of the Macintosh, along with printers, digital cameras, and other devices.

Jobs was disgusted. Image
Image
He famously drew a simple 2x2 matrix and declared that Apple would focus on just 4 core products:

Desktop and portable computers for both consumers and professionals.

This ruthless simplification raised eyebrows, but it was necessary and became core to Apple's philosophy.
In 1998, Apple unveiled the iMac —

A sleek, colorful all-in-one computer that stood in stark contrast to the beige boxes dominating the market.

It was an instant hit, selling 800,000 units in its first 5 months.

Apple was back in the game.

But Jobs was just getting started.
Steve recognized that during his 12 year absence, Apple's brand had become stale and dry.

It needed more than great products — it needed a rallying cry.

That's when Jobs launched the 1997 "Think Different" marketing campaign to rejuvenate the brand. Image
Celebrating misfits and rebels, it repositioned Apple as innovative, cool, and exciting again.

Just like how it was during his first reign.

The public's perception of Apple began to shift.

Apple became cool again.
As the new millennium dawned, Jobs set his sights on the music industry.

In 2001, Apple introduced the iPod, promising "1,000 songs in your pocket."

Initial sales were modest, but the 2003 launch of the iTunes Store created a seamless ecosystem for digital music.
The iPod-iTunes ecosystem was game-changing — and the iPod's popularity exploded.

By 2007, Apple had sold its 100 millionth iPod, making it the best-selling digital music player of all time.

The music industry would never be the same. Image
In 2007, Jobs stepped on stage to unveil a product that would change everything:

The iPhone.

"An iPod, a phone, and an internet communicator," Jobs announced.

"Are you getting it? These are not three separate devices. This is one device."
The crowd gasped. The industry scoffed.

But Jobs knew—this wasn't just a phone. It was the future in your pocket.

With a sleek multi-touch interface and full web browsing, iPhone made BlackBerrys look like antiques overnight.

Apple sold 1 million in 74 days. Billions followed. Image
It didn't just change phones—it changed us.

How we communicate, work, play, and see the world.

iPhone birthed the app economy, killed entire industries, and crowned Apple as the king of tech.

Jobs didn't just predict the mobile revolution. He ignited it. Image
But Apple wasn't done disrupting industries.

In 2010, Jobs introduced the iPad, creating an entirely new category of tablet devices.

Despite industry doubts, the iPad became the fastest-adopted new product in tech history.
Beyond products, Jobs also reimagined retail with Apple Stores.

Unlike typical tech shops, these sleek stores let customers explore devices hands on.

This interactive approach drove sales & loyalty, making Apple Stores the highest-grossing US retailers per square foot by 2009. Image
Jobs also ended Apple's OS licensing to 3rd parties, a controversial move that initially hurt revenue.

He believed controlling both hardware AND software was key to the best user experience.

Without this move, iPhone, iPad, and Mac's massive success wouldn't be possible. Image
Internally at Apple, Jobs was known for his legendary attention to detail, obsession, and ability to build world-class teams.

He brought in Tim Cook to streamline operations.

He worked closely with design chief Jony Ive to create products as beautiful as they were functional. Image
Image
And the results of Jobs' 14-year reign speak for themselves:

In 1997, when Jobs returned, Apple was worth about $3 billion.

By 2011, when Jobs stepped down as CEO, Apple's value had skyrocketed to over $350 billion.

Apple stock rose 9,000% in that time period. Image
His company that was once 90 days from bankruptcy had become the most valuable in the world.

Sadly, 56-year-old Jobs passed away on October 5, 2011, shortly after handing the reins to Tim Cook.

But the foundation he built continues to propel Apple to new heights. Image
In 2018, under Cook's leadership, Apple became the first U.S. company to reach a $1 trillion market cap.

By 2024, that value had tripled to around $3 trillion. Image
Image
Steve Jobs didn't just save Apple.

He revolutionized personal computing, digital music, retail stores, the tablet market, and mobile phones.

His vision didn't just change an industry—it shaped the 21st century.

It's a comeback story for the ages.
I write deeper about tech and internet trends in my newsletter.

Join 42,000+ internet entrepreneurs reading weekly here (for free): aisolopreneur.beehiiv.com

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with Ole Lehmann

Ole Lehmann Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @itsolelehmann

May 20
The $73M German startup that's making Zapier sweat:

• Built by ONE developer working nights and weekends
• Now has 400+ integrations
• Primed to capture upside in the AI agentic economy

How n8n became Europe's answer to America's automation monopoly: 🧵 Image
Image
In 2019, developer Jan Oberhauser faced a common problem:

Zapier was too limited and expensive. Custom coding was too time-consuming.

So he built n8n in his Berlin apartment after work hours.

Jan created the first version of n8n ("n-eight-n") during evenings and weekends.
When he shared it on Hacker News, users immediately recognized its advantages:

• Visual workflows anyone could understand
• Powerful customization when needed
• Open-source foundation
• Self-hostable with no arbitrary limits

By 2021? Image
Read 12 tweets
May 15
In 2015, British bankers laughed in his face:

"Zero fees? You'll be bankrupt in months."

Today, Revolut processes £1 TRILLION in transactions and makes £1 BILLION in profit.

How Nikolay Storonsky built Europe's most valuable fintech by breaking every rule in banking 🧵: Image
2015: Russian-born Nikolay Storonsky was frustrated by crazy fees when exchanging currencies during business trips.

His solution? Build it himself.

While traditional banks were charging 5% hidden fees on foreign exchanges, Revolut offered a shocking alternative: Image
Zero fees. Real exchange rates. No bullshit.

The banking establishment laughed.

"You can't make money that way," they said.

But Nikolay Storonsky wasn't building another bank.

Because Revolut was solving real pain points that banks had ignored for decades:
Read 14 tweets
May 14
The British Royal Navy's new secret weapon:

AI-powered drones that hunt Russian submarines without being detected.

Built by Germany's Helsing, these silent trackers finally illuminate what's hiding in the ocean's depths.

Here's why underwater warfare will never be the same 🧵: Image
Founded in 2021 by 3 founders in Munich, Helsing has become Europe's most valuable defense-tech in just 3 years.

Their mission?

Transform warfare with AI that turns chaos into crystal-clear battlefield awareness.

But their latest breakthrough isn't in the air or on land... Image
It's happening deep beneath the waves.

You see, for decades, tracking Russian submarines has been nearly impossible:

• They're incredibly quiet
• Sound distorts underwater
• Human sonar operators need 5+ years of training
• Covering vast oceans required massive resources Image
Read 16 tweets
May 9
Last night, I went to a techno-optimist meetup at a hacker house in Berlin.

Europe's tech scene is coming ALIVE again.

15 observations I wrote from the evening 🧵: Image
Image
Something fundamentally shifted in the last 5-6 months

This was very obvious to everyone: the "vibe shift" is felt throughout the ecosystem.

US politics are uniting Europeans more than ever.

Like a shared sense of "it's our time to show we can do shit on our own again."
Ideas like EU Inc have a big mental impact

Even though nothing is enacted yet, concepts like the EU Inc are creating a unifying goal for the ecosystem.

I've been saying steps like this have enormous psychological impact.

Surprisingly, most people were familiar with EU Inc.
Read 18 tweets
May 8
Europe's tax collectors are harming our economic future.

But 1 fiscal policy change could reverse the damage.

It'd cost almost nothing long-term.
And it'd create massive economic returns.

Here's the radical tax policy every European nation should copy 🧵: Image
First, let's face the brutal reality:

• US startups raised $162.7B in 2024
• EU startups? Just $39.5B
• European founders flee to Silicon Valley daily
• Tech talent exodus accelerating

But it's not about culture or talent - it's about structural barriers. Image
When a EU startup launches, they face immediate taxation that drains critical resources during their most vulnerable phase.

Think what startups need most:

• Cash to develop products
• Resources to hire talent
• Runway to iterate and improve
• Capital to scale operations
Read 17 tweets
May 6
If you're a scientist in America right now, Europe just made you an offer you can't refuse:

€500M.
7-year guaranteed funding.
Unprecedented academic freedom.

Right as Trump slashes US research funding.

The shocking EU strategy that aims to poach America's brightest 🧵: Image
Yesterday at Sorbonne University in Paris, Emmanuel Macron & Ursula von der Leyen announced:

• €500M specifically targeting American scientists
• Higher grants + longer contracts for researchers
• Fast-tracked immigration for top talent

The message was crystal clear:
"We call on researchers worldwide to unite and join us … If you love freedom, come and help us stay free."

This isn't just another boring EU initiative.

It's a calculated strike at America's scientific dominance at the PERFECT moment.

But why now?
Read 10 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Don't want to be a Premium member but still want to support us?

Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal

Or Donate anonymously using crypto!

Ethereum

0xfe58350B80634f60Fa6Dc149a72b4DFbc17D341E copy

Bitcoin

3ATGMxNzCUFzxpMCHL5sWSt4DVtS8UqXpi copy

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us!

:(