Time's Runner-Up for Person of the Year: Tim Cook, Apple CEO
President Obama edged him out. Tim Cook is the most powerful gay CEO in the world.
___________
Tim Cook has the decidedly nontrivial distinction of being the first CEO of Apple since the very first to come to power without blood on his hands. For most of its history, Apple has had a succession problem: it had no internal mechanism for transferring power from one CEO to the next without descending into civil war in between. Each time, Cook says, the way that the CEO was named was when somebody got fired and a new one came in.
This clearly bothered Steve Jobs, because he spoke to Cook about it shortly before he died. Steve wanted the CEO transition to be professional, Cook says. That was his top thing when he decided to become chairman. I had every reason to believe, and I think he thought, that that was going to be in a long time. As we now know, it wasnt.
As long as he was handpicking his successor, youd think Jobs would have chosen someone in his own image, but he and Cook, who was Jobs COO at Apple, are in a lot of ways diametrical opposites. Jobs was loud, brash, unpredictable, uninhibited and very often unshaven. Cook isnt. He doesnt look like the CEO of Apple, he looks more like an Apple product: quiet, tidy, carefully curated, meticulously tooled and at the same time strangely warm and inviting. He doesnt look like Jobs, he looks like something Jobs would have made. Cooks flawless cap of white hair could have been designed by Jony Ive and fabricated in China out of brushed aluminum.
And like an Apple product, Cook runs smooth and fast. When Jobs died on Oct. 5, 2011, of pancreatic cancer, there were questions about whether Cook could lead Apple. Some, myself included, wondered whether Apple was even a viable company without Jobs. Since then Cook has gone about his business apparently unintimidated by his role as successor to one of the greatest innovators in history. Cooks record hasnt been flawless, but he has presided in a masterly way over both a thorough, systematic upgrading of each of the companys major product lines and a run-up in the companys financial fortunes that can only be described as historic.
http://poy.time.com/2012/12/19/runner-up-tim-cook-the-technologist