Skip to content
Home » Transcript of Adam Lashinsky Interviews Tim Cook on Apple’s Future In China

Transcript of Adam Lashinsky Interviews Tim Cook on Apple’s Future In China

Here is the full transcript of a conversation between Adam Lashinsky of Fortune Magazine and Apple CEO Tim Cook on Apple’s Future In China. This event took place on [Dec 6, 2017].  

Introduction

ADAM LASHINSKY: Welcome, Tim.

TIM COOK: Thank you. Great to be here.

ADAM LASHINSKY: I’m so pleased personally that you’re here helping us make history in Guangzhou. I know you’ve been here all week.

TIM COOK: We have a lot of exciting things to talk about.

Apple’s History in China

ADAM LASHINSKY: Apple has a rich history with China, and you have a rich history with China because you’ve been traveling here a long time. Could you share a thought on that and also reflect on what has changed?

TIM COOK: I came to China for the first time maybe a quarter century ago, so that’s the reason my hair is gray by now. And it’s just been a sea change. I mean, you think about it now, some of the most modern cities in the world are in China. In the mid-90s, you wouldn’t find any modern cities of the world here.

The infrastructure that has gone on in China, whether you know it from the moment you land in the airport to the roads, is just extraordinary. The most modern in the world, arguably. I think the other thing that you feel is that over that period of time, there’s a lot more openness than there was in the mid-90s. Maybe not where we’d all like to be, but it’s come an extraordinary distance.

Also, China at that time was, at least from our point of view, focused mainly in China. Now China plays a leadership position for the world in many different areas, and so it’s like a different country. If you were to come in when I did and you went to sleep for the 25 years and you were parachuted back in, it would be unrecognizable.

ADAM LASHINSKY: As if you were a supply chain Rip Van Winkle.

TIM COOK: That’s right.

Apple’s Business in China

ADAM LASHINSKY: Well, let’s plunge into talking about Apple’s business in China, Tim, perhaps give everybody a quick overview of the many things that Apple does here.

TIM COOK: China has extraordinary skills. And probably the part that is the most unknown is there’s almost 2 million application developers in China that write apps for the iOS App Store. These are some of the most innovative mobile apps in the world. And the entrepreneurs that run them are some of the most inspiring and entrepreneurial in the world. Those are sold not only here, but exported around the world.

Also in the manufacturing space, China has moved into very advanced manufacturing. And so you find in China the intersection of craftsman kind of skill and sophisticated robotics and the computer science world. That intersection, which is very, very rare to find anywhere, that kind of skill, which is very important for our business because of the precision and quality level that we like.

And then of course, the thing that most people focus on when they’re a foreigner coming to China is they focus on the market itself and the size market. And obviously it’s the biggest market in the world in so many different areas. But for us, the number one attraction is the quality of people. So we’ve had an extraordinary relationship over three decades, really.

Manufacturing Evolution in China

ADAM LASHINSKY: Let’s come back to the manufacturing and how it’s changed. I think most people think of China’s importance to Apple, that Apple has been manufacturing, designing in California, manufacturing in China for many years. You were central to this strategy at Apple before you were CEO. And so the notion is Apple designed these things, they sent them over, China made them. It’s an antiquated picture, isn’t that right?

TIM COOK: Yeah, it’s not designed and then sent over. That sounds like there’s not interaction. The truth is the process engineering and process development associated with our products require innovation in and of itself. Not only the product, but the way that it’s made. Because we want to make things in the scale of hundreds of millions and we want the quality level of zero defect. That’s always what we strive for.

And the way that you get there, particularly when you’re pushing the envelope on the type of materials that you have and the precision of the specifications that you’re forcing requires a hand in glove kind of partnership. You don’t do it by throwing it over the chasm. It would never work. I can’t imagine how that would be. I don’t want to imagine how it would be.

Manufacturing Partnerships

ADAM LASHINSKY: I know you visited a manufacturing partner this week. Could you tell everybody about it? And if not, by the way, later in the afternoon I’m interviewing Terry Guo of Foxconn. That’s not who you visited this week, right?

TIM COOK: No, I visited different partners. I visited ICT. And for those of you that haven’t heard of ICT, they manufacture, among other things, the AirPods for us. And when you think about AirPods as a user, you might think, oh, this couldn’t be that hard. It’s really small. The AirPods have several hundred components in them and the level of precision embedded to get the audio quality—without getting into really nerdy engineering—it’s really hard and it requires a level of skill that is extremely high.

We met ICT back many years ago. They started making tables for us. Grace Wu, who owns the company, started her career working for Hon Hai on the production line. This is an incredible example of the Chinese dream being realized. Now she owns a multi-billion dollar company that does unbelievable quality work.

You know, I love obviously the quality and the work that they do. But the other thing they do is she believes, she shares our view on how you treat people. And so if you were to go there and talk to a lot of the line workers, which we do often, you would find some of the happiest people in the world there because they’re treated so well.