Where Data Tells the Story
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The chart tracks Nokia’s blue line soaring from $116.2 B in 2001 to a $157.2 B peak in 2007—then crashing to $18.0 B by 2011—while Apple’s white line rockets from $7.7 B to $376.4 B, overtaking Nokia around 2008.
Key Takeaways
Analysis
Nokia’s decline underscores the risk of resting on legacy strengths when markets pivot. Apple’s explosive growth highlights how a singular, well-timed innovation—backed by ecosystem lock-in—can rewrite corporate fortunes.