In 2001, Apple founder and CEO Steve Jobs wanted to move Apple beyond personal computers. He still envisioned the PC as a "digital hub" where consumers could manage photos, videos and music they acquired or generated through mobile devices.
Music seemed especially fertile ground. At the time, there was no good way for consumers to buy, share and listen to digital music. Illegal downloads, courtesy of sharing sites like Napster and Kazaa, wreaked havoc on the recording industry.
So with the consent of major record labels, Jobs created the iTunes online music store where consumers could purchase music for 99 cents per song.
While iTunes is now the largest music retailer in the world, it was seen as a huge risk back in 2001. Would consumers, who could easily download music from the Internet for free, accept a legal service that charged for the music?
Because iTunes was so fundamentally new, Apple needed a way to instantly legitimize the service to millions of customers across the country at the same time. So Jobs approached Best Buy, its biggest supplier, with an intriguing offer: Apple would give the iTunes store to Best Buy for free (though Apple would still control its content), and the two sides would split the revenue evenly.
"He rang us up and said, 'I need distribution. I have got this thing called iTunes and I only want some cut of it,' " said a former top Best Buy executive. " 'I don't want all of it, I'll give it to you, you can have iTunes.' We could use it in the stores. He would give us 50 percent of the revenue of each song and we did not have to pay for anything."
Best Buy declined the offer.
"They didn't understand it," the former executive said. "Some of the things that we said no to, you will be shocked. It's a cultural issue in that we don't know what we don't know."