Apple at 50: The Japanese Management Philosophy Behind Its Rise
Apple's half-century milestone traces back to a postwar Japanese quality management course that shaped Steve Jobs.
Apple just hit the big 5-0. And the secret sauce behind its decades-long obsession with quality? A largely forgotten management course from postwar Japan.
A deep dive by the Financial Times reveals how a highly influential Japanese management program became the philosophical backbone of Steve Jobs' approach to building products. The course, developed in Japan's reconstruction era, emphasized relentless quality control — a principle Jobs would later embed into Apple's DNA.
That obsession didn't just produce pretty hardware. It laid the groundwork for Apple's dominance in the iPhone era, transforming a garage startup into the most valuable company on Earth.
Most Apple origin stories focus on Silicon Valley mythology. This one points east — to a classroom in postwar Japan where the real blueprint for modern Apple was quietly written decades before the first iPhone shipped.