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The iPhone has landed....

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  •  Quote: y2kbg  haha have you seen that wanderer has joined the Mac cult?
    Joined it? Mate I started it!

    Posted: Friday, 26 January 2007 at 10:41AM (AEDT)

  • edited January 2007
    Source http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/CultOfMac/~3/81738163/wharton_prof_re.html The strategic side of design is something I'm hugely passionate about. It underlies my day job, and this is a conversation that everyone needs to have. Let's examine the under-pinnings of Fader's analysis: It's clear from the existing smart phone market that Outlook integration and thumb-sized keyboards are critical to the success of the products currently in the market, particularly the Palm Treo and RIM BlackBerry lines. There are tons on strategies that can be followed to be a new entrant into this market. Here's my take on it: Value Play This one is pretty simple -- copy what exists, but figure out how to do it more cheaply. This is often the tack of developing markets, because cheap labor is a critical, abundant resource that companies in the U.S., Japan and Europe don't possess. It's also a wholly unstable strategy. If you can go low, someone else can go lower and so on until your profits really suffer or people look at you the same way they do the toys for sale at 7-11. There's also the value-design play, which is similar but involves going commodity while also looking and feeling good. It's also slightly more sustainable -- see Target of the early '90s. Samsung does this a lot. Kia, also. Strategic Design So what game is Apple playing, you might be asking yourself? A strategic design play, naturally. Design isn't just about styling -- it's about creating something great that meets the real needs of people. Look at OXO/Good Grips. If you're not familiar with the company, here's the elevator pitch. A guy notices that his wife's arthritis makes it difficult for her to use current vegetable peelers. He asked a designer friend to create a peeler with a nice big handle that would be easy to use for people with hand disabilities. As it turned out, that product also was easier to use for the rest of the population, too. From there, OXO has launched an empire based purely on universal design -- focus on extreme users to generate new opportunities for the rest of us. They're going to own that market for decades. Competitive Response This is one that classically occurs to marketers. Take the industry-standard feature set and add an innovative feature or form on top to set it apart from the current players. This is essentially what Microsoft attempted with Zune. It wasn't successful on their part, but their thinking was -- "Hey, let's take an iPod, put an identical-looking but differently-functioning hardware interface on it and add in the ability to share songs over WiFi!" This is also a really unsustainable model, even when successful. It means that any competitor who matches your new benchmark and adds something else on top of it has the chance to knock you off your game. Marketers tend to live (and die) by this strategy. And it definitely has its benefits. It pays attention to what already exists and works to meet the explicit demands of the market. Clayton Christensen wrote about it quite eloquently in "The Innovator's Dilemma." A great marketing organization will pay attention to the demands of its existing customers -- they'd be fools not to. The last thing you want to do is alienate them by ignoring what they want. Christensen covered this as it played out in the computer market with regard to smaller and smaller hard drives. Essentially, each time a new drive size came out, the major computer makers would ignore it, because their storage demands were less than what their customers needed. As it turned out, those technologies became critical to the development of new computer products that utterly devastated what came before: Mainframes got assaulted by minicomputers were assaulted by personal computers got attacked by laptops. This is how IBM fell, then rose again in the 1980s. How do companies get so vulnerable to these dumb products that aren't even as capable as the stuff that's already on the market? (The technical term is a "disruptive technology.") Very simply -- they pay attention to what their customers and shareholders care about. And because that's who they cater to, they miss the unclaimed opportunities for new customers. Why does this sound familiar? Let's bring back Prof. Fader's most recent quote: Pete Fader here! I have no problem with the negative reactions. The iPhone will be a nifty device and a very successful (and profitable) niche item, but Apple blew a great opportunity to make a more serious dent in the cellphone market. They are selling their customers (and therefore their shareholders) short by refusing to add certain features and not making their platform more open to other kinds of software. They will never obtain even a small fraction of the penetration that they have obtained with the iPod. Oh well. Almost a decade after the publication of "The Innovator's Dilemma," the marketing universe still hasn't learned to diagnose a disruptive product when it shows up! If Apple listened to their customers, we'd have a boring phone that looks like an iPod, click-wheel and all -- that's how most envisioned the iPhone. Of course the iPhone looks all wrong to many customers and investors in the smart phone market -- it's attempting to reach new customers and investors who aren't interested in what's already out in the world! And because a lot of really revolutionary products do things people have never seen before, customers can't ask for them by name -- great companies have to figure out what hasn't been done and what people need that they don't know they need. Where's the growth in the smart phone market? Not by trying to get people to trade in their BlackBerry tomorrow, let me tell you. It's in convincing the millions of people with fairly commodity cell phones and an iPod that what they really want to do is trade in both for an iPhone. It's an unclaimed market space, and its overhead is nearly unstoppable. Apple's tool for getting there is around a revolutionary interface and not just an iPod but THE BEST iPOD IN THE WORLD built in so people actually understand how to use all the features already found in smart phones everywhere. It's what Apple is counting on. And if they're wrong -- they certainly might be, especially about the small virtual keyboard, which no one has tried out, particularly -- they can get it right next time. They can learn over time and roll out a really amazing product line to make the iPhone resemble the iPod line. Rome wasn't built in a day, and neither was Apple's death grip on the MP3 market. They face a tremendous adoption problem -- they're wisely going super high-end to cater to early adopters. They can learn from those early adopters to make the product better, smaller, cheaper and more customized. That's when everyone else will want one -- including the people staunchly defending their Treos and BlackBerrys right now. That's my story, and I'm sticking to it. Pete, I would love to hear your response -- this really is about creating a dialogue, and I don't want to be a one-man band.
  • And if they're wrong -- they certainly might be, especially about the small virtual keyboard, which no one has tried out, particularly -- they can get it right next time

    The best line in the whole piece. Especially those last seven words. I believe it's also the same as what I and a few others said earlier in the thread.
  • dan39dan39 New
    edited January 2007
    Get this.. Apparently Jim Cramer said that AT&T made it very clear that it's going to use Apple's iPhone to get customers from Verizon Wireless by giving away its service for a year and a half to those customers who buy the phone.

    http://www.appleinsider.com/article.php?id=2437
    http://www.thestreet.com/_mktw/funds/realmoneyradiowrap/10334546.html

    Hopefully that's service with the media bundle.
  • Now that's an interesting way of doing things. I would buy the phone for that sort of deal.
  • edited January 2007
    that deal has already been debunked no free services from AT&T plus iphone price is non subsidized price, and there won't be any subsidizing of iphone either
  • Well that sucks. I had actually had my interest piqued again.
  • Hahahahaha =)
  • thats nice!

    There should be a sequel after the MAC is cocky enough to tell the PC that he is(thinks he is) invincible. Mwa ha ha
  • haha that would be such a fun way to call people...
  • Readers Write About iPhone, 3G Wireless Networks source http://www.roughlydrafted.com/RD/RDM.Tech.Q1.07/68F440E0-01B9-42D1-98DD-76A0976FAB5E.html
  • It appears that Apple are using Mitchell & Webb now for their UK version of the adverts. Might have shot themselves in the foot there.
  • I am agree with what the first reader said; 3G is not supported because of the already short battery life.

    LG did the same choice: http://www.geekzone.co.nz/content.asp?ContentId=6958
  • http://www.iphonect.com/apple/iphone-with-3g-coming-out/

    Misleading title but still, there's hope!
  • i'm shocked
    lot of u guys whined the iphone won't let u edit word and excel documents.
    I just read the just released Windows Mobile 6 review and saw this
    The most striking application improvement is the new Office Mobile for Standard. One of the big criticisms of Windows Mobile for Smartphone was its inability to edit Microsoft Office documents. Now, Office Mobile lets you view PowerPoint presentations and view and edit Word and Excel documents – a little. In Word, editing is restricted to inserting and deleting text, and a few very basic formatting commands like bold and underline; there's no font or paragraph formatting, nothing rich. In Excel Mobile, there's a neat zoomed-out "overview" mode, basic formula functions and support for multiple spreadsheets, but there's no "new" option in either program. That's right, these programs are for editing e-mail attachments, not creating new documents.
    so what were u guys going on about. even MS itself didn't let u edit its own documents untill now, and even then it's just measly basic editing
  • Meh, my XDA Orbit edits word and Excel docs just fine thanks...
  • I just wanted to point out that Wanderer's enquiring should be spelled as 'inquiring'.
  • Strewth, what a dongleberry!
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