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A Look At Steve Jobs – What Happens To The Apple When It Loses Its Core? Part 1

Since 1997, Steve Jobs has led the MacWorld Keynote event addressing the Apple flock, with pride and power. From a majestic, seemingly mystical, pulpit set atop a wide, dramatically lit stage, he has regaled stockholders, software developers, and enthusiastic consumers, numbering in the millions, with Apple’s plans for the coming year. His intimidating sense of control has afforded him the kind of command over this ever-growing audience that seldom belongs to individuals who don’t draw their power from Government or God. It is easy to understand why every product launch, press release, news leak, or any one of a countless list of maneuvers, can cause measurable, even drastic, shifts in the stock market. With great power comes great liability. Steve Jobs is indeed the core of Apple Inc. and with so much vested in this great company, the big question is very clear: What happens to the apple when it loses its core?

The 2009 Mac World Keynote Event marked the day when the devoted members of the Church of Apple got to see that Steve Jobs bleeds like everyone else. His broken posture and slow, weakened movements were daunting. The dead silence of the audience as all the attendees hung on every word that Jobs’ offered was indeed reminiscent of his earlier grandeur. Yet, this time, this silence was as much a result of the shock, felt equally by all, as it was the usual mark of respect. As always, when Steve makes a move, the Universe responds. Uncountable reactions flooded the net. Articles depicted Jobs’ approaching demise. Smarmy opportunists launched viral games inviting users to bet when he would die, what disease he had, when the company would fall as well as innumerable others. Nothing, however, was as powerful as the moment that Steve Jobs relieved himself from the keynote address deferring to Phil Schiller, Apple’s Senior Vice President of Worldwide Product Marketing, to address the Apple Nation as the voice of god whilst he watched from the side on a stool.

When the dismal rumors of Steve Jobs’ health found confirmation at the Mac World Key Note Event, stock prices immediately fell. Apple Inc. faced a moment of ugly and unavoidable truth. Jobs are Apple and this might be the one job in this country that cannot be outsourced. Moreover, even if another man, or a group of men, could be wrangled, trained, incentivized and impassioned to relieve Steve Jobs from his post successfully, will the countrymen be willing to give themselves over to a new king?

Jobs are responsible for the generation of the intuitive operating system that used iconography instead of code to represent actions on the personal computer platform. Jobs are responsible for the concept of beautifying the casing of the systems so that they could stand almost like art in one’s home. Jobs made possible the level of animation capacity necessary for the digital masterpieces that keep coming out of Pixar. He saved the music business by conceiving a platform that could monetize a database of media files and he was able to position this marketplace on hundreds of millions of computers around the globe as well as, more recently, in the pocket of almost hundred million men and women in the United States. He has erected temples to Apple’s greatness in major cities around the world whose awesome presence evokes imagery of high priests and virgins surrounded by platinum chalices spilling over with grapes on the vine. Everything that Apple means to the world is a direct extension of Steve Jobs’ very soul.

Jon Kobrin is a lifelong New Yorker currently residing on the Upper East Side. He is a principal & CMO of Appsolute Media LLC. He’s obsessed with branding and has an unwavering belief that there is no excuse for poor design. To learn more about Jon Kobrin is on Facebook and Jon Kobrin is on Naymz.