Twenty years ago, Apple made computers and iPods and Google had a search engine and a few extra services.
But Apple's fast success with the iPhone in 2007 made executives at both companies realize that mobile devices were the future of computing. Google bought a smartphone operating system and the companies have competed ever since, becoming the poles around which all other tech firms orbit.
Today, UnitedHealth Group, Minnesota's largest company, and CVS Health are vying to become the iOS and Android of American health care.
The analogy isn't perfect, of course. Though constantly consolidating, it's not certain the health care industry will become as polarized as tech. Minnetonka-based UnitedHealth still competes with hundreds of companies in insurance, data and financial services, pharmaceutical benefits and clinics.
With nearly 10,000 retail stores, CVS is seen by investors to be more closely battling Walgreens Boots Alliance. Though CVS and UnitedHealth are nearly equal in revenue, investors give UnitedHealth a market value more than four times greater than CVS.
But from strikingly different starting points — UnitedHealth in insurance and CVS in drugstores — they've become more like each other in recent years, both racing to where the puck is going in health care.
CVS bought UnitedHealth's biggest insurance rival, Aetna, in 2018. UnitedHealth has developed a small retail presence through its Optum clinics.
They both had around $320 billion in 2022 revenue. Only four U.S. companies are larger: Walmart, Amazon, Apple and ExxonMobil.