Tim Cook says Apple working on 'a lot of stuff' in health, not necessarily profit-driven

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Apple is secretly working on many things in the health arena, CEO Tim Cook said in an interview published on Monday, but only some of them are expected to translate into revenue-generating businesses.




"There's much more in the health area," Cook told Fortune. "There's a lot of stuff that I can't tell you about that we're working on, some of which it's clear there's a commercial business there. And some of it it's clear there's not. And some of it it's not clear. I do think it's a big area for Apple's future."

The CEO explained that some current efforts, like ResearchKit, don't have a business model, and are simply born of an interest in improving society.

"Will it [ResearchKit] eventually lead us somewhere? We'll find out. I can't answer that today," he commented.

The company does incidentally benefit, however, since ResearchKit relies on data gathered from iPhones and Apple Watches.

Apple's next health-related product is likely the Apple Watch "Series 3," set to premiere at a Tuesday press event. Its main feature should be LTE, but there have also been rumors about "smart bands" and/or glucose tracking. The latter might make the device popular with diabetics wanting to avoid invasive tracking.

In other segments of the interview, Cook addressed topics like the high cost of Apple products, and the seeming contradiction with that and aiming to make products for everyone.

"But if you look across our product lines, you can buy an iPad today for under $300. You can buy an iPhone, depending upon which one you select, for in that same kind of ballpark. And so these are not for the rich," he insisted. "We obviously wouldn't have over a billion products that are in our active installed base if we were making them for the rich because that's a sizable number no matter who's looking at the numbers."

On the subject of setting up an Apple charitable foundation, Cook argued against making altruistic efforts a "separate thing," and suggested that the company's initiatives have more impact because they have the entire workforce behind it, rather than a relative handful of people.

Cook took a defensive stance on issues like the distractions caused by Apple devices, and whether or not corporations in general benefit the world, given the socio-political and environmental damage they can cause.

"I think that corporations are like anything else in that there are some that are good and some that are not," he said. "So I don't think you can paint all with one brush. Just like people. Most people are really big hearted. But occasionally you meet somebody that's not. And so corporations are like that too, I think. I don't subscribe to 'all are good' or 'all are bad.' I think life is not simple like that."

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 5
    Health products and not profit driven? Wall Street already hates hearing things like that. Time for another Apple downgrade. No tech company CEO can tell greedy investors something like that and get away with it. It's bad enough Apple is trying to help save the ecology. Greedy big investors only want to hear about things where excess money is transferred directly into their pockets. They sure don't care anything about health or the ecology.
    Ofercornchipjony0
  • Reply 2 of 5
    Health products and not profit driven? Wall Street already hates hearing things like that. Time for another Apple downgrade. No tech company CEO can tell greedy investors something like that and get away with it. It's bad enough Apple is trying to help save the ecology. Greedy big investors only want to hear about things where excess money is transferred directly into their pockets. They sure don't care anything about health or the ecology.
    Well if it's free but you need to be in the ecosystem to have it, it is indirectly profit driven. Jobs was very interested in simplifying human interaction with the health system and if apple provides a lot this for free this would provide a lot of stickyness
    Solitmaycornchip
  • Reply 3 of 5
    I'm guessing one of the differentiators between a healthy Jobs and Cook was the latter's interest in things  could make without an immediate ROI.

    I'm also guessing when Jobs confronted his mortality after failed alternative, unorthodox interventions, he embraced health-based IT, so would have told Cook to go for it, in terms of  chasing health, as a "good thing to do".

    One day, Tim might let us know.
  • Reply 4 of 5
    One day, Tim might let us know.
    I bet he won't, if only because the media or others would construe it as "Cook is shilling [name of new product] on the legacy of Jobs!"
  • Reply 5 of 5
    nickedinburghnickedinburgh Posts: 2unconfirmed, member
    > some of which it's clear there's a commercial business there. And some of it it's clear there's not. And some of it it's not clear So, Tim. Could we say there are known knowns... and known unknowns... and unknown knowns... ?
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