Bill Campbell, a legendary figure in Silicon Valley and a major part of Apple's history, has succumbed to cancer and passed away on Monday at the age of 75.
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Campbell first joined Apple in 1983 as vice president of marketing. He left the company for a number of years — during which he built Intuit into a global financial force — until joining the board of directors following Steve Jobs's return in 1997.
Serving until 2014, Campbell was the longest-tenured director in Apple's history. He was replaced in July of that year with BlackRock partner Susan Wagner.
Campbell's death was first noted by Re/code.
Campbell was known as "the coach," as much for his position as an advisor to modern-day Silicon Valley luminaries as for the fact that he coached the Columbia University football team — his alma mater — in the mid-1970s. He had a particularly close relationship with Jobs until the Apple co-founder's own death in 2011.
"I watched him emerge as a CEO in real time," Campbell said of his time with Jobs. "I had a continuum with him. I watched him when he was general manager of the Mac division and when he went off and started NeXT. I watched Steve go from being a creative entrepreneur to a guy who had to run a business."
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