'Several people' could be the next Apple CEO, reveals Tim Cook
Apple CEO Tim Cook says that he is determined his successor will come from within the company, and is working to give the board several options.

Tim Cook (Source: BBC)
Tim Cook said in 2021 that he will probably be leaving Apple in the next ten years, and it's been reported that of course the company has succession plans. Any corporation would, but Apple was famously criticized for how secretive it was about finding a successor to Steve Jobs, and the firm is still not talking publicly about Cook's replacement.
Now in an interview with BBC podcast "Dua Lipa: At Your Service," Tim Cook has revealed that there are multiple succession plans being worked on.
"Now we're a company that believes in working on succession plans," he said, "and so we have very detailed succession plans."
"Because something that's unpredictable can always happen," he continued. "I could step off the wrong kerb tomorrow. Hopefully that doesn't happen."
Interviewer Dua Lipa pressed Cook on who was in line for succession, but while he wouldn't name anyone, he revealed there is more than one possibility.
"I can't say [a name]," he said. "But I would say my job is to prepare several people for the ability to succeed."
"I really want the person to come from within Apple,the next CEO," he continued, "And so that's my role is to make sure that there's several for the board to pick from."
Cook wouldn't elaborate on his comment about leaving within ten years, and Lipa asked if he would be at Apple in 2050 to see the impact of the firm's environmental work.
"2050 might be a stretch," he said. "I don't know how long I'll be there."
"I love it there and I can't envision my life without being there," he continued. "And so I'll be there for a while."
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Comments
2) I've never seen curb spelled as kerb before. It's not wrong over all, but since it's quoting Tim Cook, an American, I'd say the quote should use the American spelling.
https://www.grammarbook.com/blog/spelling/curb-or-kerb/
Maybe the quote was copied from a BBC transcription or closed captions?
Greg Joswiak would be 67.
Lisa Jackson would be 67.
Eddy Cue would be 66.
Johny Srouji would be 66.
Deirdre O'Brien would be 64.
Craig Federighi would be 61.
John Ternus would be 55.
If Tim Cook retires at 70, around the same age as Bob Iger tried to retire, he will have been CEO for just under 20 years. For a stable transition, the successor would ideally be able to lead Apple for 10 years minimum before the age of 70.
Federighi would almost manage this and would be a good fit but it feels like a long-term successor would be under 50 today, would start as CEO at 57 and be able to lead Apple for over 10 years. Tim Cook started as CEO at 51.
This could be any of the younger people that show up in the Apple events. For example Colleen Novielli has been at Apple for over 9 years and would be around 46 in 7 years:
https://www.linkedin.com/in/colleen-novielli-59a01147
People are thinking about suitable candidates for a CEO transition today but they'd be taking over in 7+ years so it has to be someone suitable 7+ years from now. Almost all the leadership currently at Apple will be retiring by then and it will be a new generation that takes over. The old leadership will be Apple Fellows, board members, consultants etc and available for guidance.
I guess Apple's pivot to software and services is the main strike against him, but I still think of Apple as predominantly a hardware company.