In 1997, Apple Computer was on the brink of collapse.
With just 90 days of operational cash remaining, the once-pioneering technology company faced imminent bankruptcy. The innovative spark that had launched the personal computing revolution seemed extinguished, product lines had ballooned into a confusing array of offerings, and Microsoft’s Windows dominated the market.
It was into this desperate situation that a familiar figure returned-Steve Jobs, the very same co-founder who had been unceremoniously ousted from Apple twelve years earlier.
What followed became one of the most remarkable corporate comebacks in business history.