Apple Inc. (AAPL): CEO Tim Cook Does Deserve Time

At this time last year, Apple Inc. (NASDAQ:AAPL) CEO Tim Cook was sitting on top of the world. Apple had just reported results that blew by expectations for two consecutive quarters, culminating in the company’s stratospheric gross margin of 47.4% for the quarter that ended in March 2012. Not surprisingly, these strong results led to big increases in Apple’s stock price. In the first nine months following Tim Cook’s appointment as the permanent CEO of Apple (which occurred on Aug. 24, 2011), Apple stock soared more than 50%.

AAPL Chart

Apple Price Chart; data by YCharts.

Clearly, at this time last year, the market believed Tim Cook was a capable leader for Apple Inc. (NASDAQ:AAPL). There was comparatively little second-guessing of Cook’s decisions, and no hand-wringing about what Steve Jobs would do if he were still around.

Fast-forward a year, and things have changed dramatically. Before Apple’s earnings report in late April, Forbes contributor Gene Marcial asserted that anonymous “sources” had heard that Apple might be looking for a replacement CEO. Marcial further noted that several major funds had cut their holdings of Apple and cited this as evidence of a looming shareholder rebellion. Cook seems to be holding off shareholder pressure for now because of Apple’s recently announced dividend and buyback increase. Still, the flurry of speculation about his job security indicates that many people think Tim Cook has not performed up to expectations. This judgment seems very hasty, though: Cook deserves at least another year at the helm to show whether he can deliver exciting new products.

The end of innovation?
Not surprisingly, the main worry about Cook’s leadership is that as an “operations guy” he won’t be able to drive innovation at Apple Inc. (NASDAQ:AAPL). Steve Jobs had an uncanny ability to figure out what consumers would want and devise successful marketing campaigns for the resulting products, and it is unfair to expect Cook or anybody else to “be the next Steve Jobs.” That said, Apple bears believe that competitors have caught up to Apple Inc. (NASDAQ:AAPL) because the company is settling for evolution rather than innovation. Bears frequently like to point to the iPhone 5 or the iPad Mini as evidence for their point.

The iPad Mini. Source: Apple.

Both products — but especially the iPad Mini — differentiate themselves from predecessors primarily by adopting a new form factor. The iPhone 5 has a slightly larger screen than previous iPhones, while the iPad Mini is a slimmed-down iPad with a smaller screen. Critics argue that these products are mere reactions to big-screen phones from Samsung and others, and smaller, cheaper tablets from the likes of Amazon.com, Inc. (NASDAQ:AMZN) and Google Inc (NASDAQ:GOOG). Instead, they assert that Apple should be innovating by bringing completely different products to market.

Innovation is a process
The single-minded focus on what Apple Inc. (NASDAQ:AAPL) has done lately seems misguided. First, it takes a long time to develop and perfect a new product category. Apple engineers were working on a touchscreen tablet by 2004 or so, more than five years before the iPad’s introduction. Ultimately, Apple concentrated on the iPhone first, before returning to what became the iPad. Apple hasnt introduced any new product categories since Tim Cook took the helm, but it’s quite possible that one or more products are in development and will hit the market in the next year or two.

Second, while recent iPhone upgrades have been incremental in nature, that’s really a testament to Apple’s already having made all of the “easy” improvements to the design. With the iPhone 4, Apple pushed the “thin, light, and sleek” design aesthetic as far as possible. The iPhone 4’s successors have added other useful features, such as Siri and LTE support. However, with less room for improvement, these features seemed to many observers like evolution rather than innovation.

How will we know?
Tim Cook’s critics still have one viable argument. Apple’s failure to launch a new product category in the past year may not prove that innovation is dead at Apple, but it doesn’t prove that innovation is alive, either. How long is it reasonable for investors to wait before concluding that something has gone wrong under Cook’s leadership?

Cook may have provided the answer to that question on Apple’s earnings call last month. In his prepared remarks, Cook claimed that Apple Inc. (NASDAQ:AAPL) had great opportunities in new product categories, and he also stated that the company is “hard at work on some amazing new hardware, software, and services that we can’t wait to introduce this fall and throughout 2014.”

Accordingly, investors should wait until this product cycle plays out to make an informed judgment about Tim Cook’s success or failure. Tim Cook set a clear goal for himself by setting a timeframe for new products and raising expectations for what would be coming. At the end of next year, if Apple’s existing product lines have continued to stagnate and no new product line has arrived, it will be fair to blame Cook for not delivering results. As an Apple Inc. (NASDAQ:AAPL) shareholder, I’m willing to give him that amount of time to impress me (and the rest of the world). I don’t think I will be disappointed.

The article Apple’s Tim Cook Deserves Time originally appeared on Fool.com is written by Adam Levine-Weinberg.

Fool contributor Adam Levine-Weinberg owns shares of Apple and is short shares of Amazon.com. The Motley Fool recommends and owns shares of Amazon.com, Apple, and Google.

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