Apple is shaking things up again, and this time around, its artificial intelligence leadership is in the spotlight. According to a new report, the company is actively searching for a replacement for John Giannandrea, its long-time head of AI strategy. The move signals that Apple may be planning to take its AI efforts more seriously, possibly ending the damage it has incurred over the past year.
The leadership shake-up signals Apple’s renewed focus on artificial intelligence
If you are not familiar, Giannandrea joined Apple back in 2018 and was brought in to modernize Siri and strengthen the company’s machine learning foundation. His influence shaped Apple’s entire AI framework, including the Apple Intelligence platform. However, sources now believe that the company needs to move faster in a fresh direction, possibly to offset the delays Personalized Siri has been experiencing.
Apple seeks new vision for AI
Bloomberg’s latest report suggests that Apple is not just eyeing internal talent but also considering external industry figures to lead its next AI chapter. The news arrives amid rivals like OpenAI, Google, and Microsoft continue to push boundaries with models that redefine digital assistance and what it can do. Apple needs to prove that Apple Intelligence is just as capable, and the leadership shake-up could be the first step toward it.
Replacing Giannandrea is not about filling the gap anymore, but the AI chief will need to bridge the gap between deep technical innovation and consumer-facing experiences. Apple needs someone who can integrate AI seamlessly across devices, services, and ecosystems without compromising the company’s privacy and design principles.
Health and Fitness combined under services
The AI shake-up is happening for a reason, and it is also tied to other changes in leadership inside Apple. We have recently covered that the company is planning to merge Health and Fitness and bring them under its Services division. This also suggests that we might soon see another subscription service from Apple, possibly called Health+, similar to Apple TV+.
Eddy Cue will now oversee these teams, and Craig Federighi and John Ternus will take expanded roles. The company appears to be streamlining its leadership as it pivots toward advancements in AI and hardware development. Could a new AI chief be exactly what Apple needs to finally catch up to Google and OpenAI, or is it already too late?
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