Apple is losing more than momentum this week, it’s losing people. Alan Dye, the company’s longtime head of user interface design, has left for Meta. His exit adds to a growing list of high-profile departures that’s starting to reshape Apple’s leadership team.
Alan Dye joins Meta to lead consumer device design

Dye will now serve as Chief Design Officer at Meta, where he’ll guide product design across Reality Labs. That’s the division responsible for Meta Quest headsets and its push into AR and VR. He will report directly to Meta’s CTO, Andrew Bosworth.
Dye played a key role at Apple for over a decade. He helped design interfaces for major platforms like iOS, watchOS, and macOS. His move to Meta marks a major shift in the design leadership space and it comes at a moment when Apple’s top ranks are already shifting.
Apple leadership sees multiple exits in quick succession
Dye isn’t the only one leaving. Apple’s former Chief Operating Officer Jeff Williams retired in November. Earlier this week, AI chief John Giannandrea also announced his departure.
Meanwhile, reports suggest even bigger changes may be coming. Bloomberg hinted that Johny Srouji, Apple’s head of silicon, could step away soon. Speculation about CEO Tim Cook’s future is also heating up, with some insiders expecting him to retire within a few years.
Stephen Lemay steps up to lead design at Apple
Apple isn’t wasting time filling the gap. Veteran designer Stephen Lemay will take over from Dye. Lemay has worked on every major Apple interface since 1999. According to Tim Cook, he brings “an extraordinarily high bar for excellence” and reflects Apple’s culture of collaboration.
Interestingly, Lemay’s promotion is going over well internally. Blogger John Gruber noted that several employees expressed excitement some even described the shift as a relief.
Meta gains a seasoned voice by Alan Dye, Apple gains a familiar one
Meta has been pushing to polish the design of its consumer hardware. Adding someone with Dye’s track record could help close that gap. At the same time, Apple leans into steady hands by promoting someone who knows its systems inside out.
These moves show each company taking a different path one chasing new ideas, the other reinforcing proven ones.
A quiet shift with loud implications
Alan Dye’s exit isn’t just about one job change. It’s part of a broader evolution happening at Apple. Whether this reshuffle leads to bold new directions or just steadier leadership remains to be seen. But one thing is certain: the next version of Apple is already forming.

