Tag Archive for 'Apple'

Wordpress for iPhone

Well, Wordpress for the iPhone is finally out and this is my first post using it. Very simple interface and simple configuration. It will be great to be mobile and able to blog. Stay tuned…

Sphere: Related Content

iPhone 3G Launch — Frustrations of a loyal Apple customer

Where to begin? Do I begin with the 4 hours waiting in lines at two Apple stores, the lack of pre-sale information from Apple, the friendly and well meaning, but essentially non-helpful Apple store employees, the unfriendly, unhelpful and annoying AT&T retail employees, the constantly changing information about iPhone 3G inventories, the useless Apple retail website?

I can’t think of many ways Apple and AT&T could have bungled the iPhone 3G launch more than they did. And in doing so, they are alienating the very loyal customers they need to be successful. I am certainly not alone, the WSJ blogged about the launch calling it “chaos”.  I couldn’t agree more. Let me explain…

I went to the Apple store @Bellevue Square mall on Friday with colleagues from work (both interested in the iPhone 3G) during our lunch break, only to find a line I was told was about 4 hours long. We checked with the AT&T store at the mall to find they had sold out within the first hour. The AT&T store only received about 40 units.

Later that afternoon, I went to another Apple Store (UVillage in Seattle) where the line was about 2 hours. It turns out the line was closer to 4 hours because the employees assisting with iPhone activations were beginning to go home and the processing rate was cut in half. I was initially informed there were plenty of iPhones and everyone in line would get one. About 10 minutes later a different Apple employee came out and told us they were runnning low on 16GB Black iPhones and probably wouldn’t have sufficient for everyone in line. About every 20 minutes a friendly Apple employee would come out and give us an update. Each time, we heard a slightly different story, and the Apple employees were careful not to deviate from script–they politely declined to answer questions like–How many iPhones are left? How many people are working on sales/activation? Will you run out of model X, Y or Z? At various times, an employee would come out and tell us that model X was low (usually 16 GB Black), the next employee would say, “No, we have model X, but Y is low”, the next would say, “X and Y are fine, but Z is running low” ?!? Each encounter left those of us in line scratching our heads, but we were all hopeful we would still be able to purchase our desired model. After 2.5 hours, a manager came out to inform us that the 16 GB Black model had sold out. I left.

The next morning, I got up early to get back to the Bellevue Square Apple store. At 10:30 (30 minutes after opening), the line had already grown to two hours. We were assured that they supplies looked good and that they were processing new activations as quickly as possible. The line wasn’t moving. When we asked why, we were told that there were fewer employees working on iPhones that day (day 2) so we should expect delays. Behind me the line continued to grow. At one point, an Apple employee came out and told those at the very back of the line (20+ people and 1 hour behind) that the 16 GB models were running low. When she came toward us, we asked about supplies and were told, we would be fine. The line continued to move slowly. After 2 hours, I was number 20 in line. At that point, an Apple manager came out and told us, they were out of 16 GB Black iPhones. I left.

Whenever we asked about inventories, we were repeatedly told, “We don’t know how many we have, we can’t count them”. Why not? How hard would it have been to count to 50, 100, 150? How hard would it have been to hand out a card with the desired model based on actual inventory? While I appreciated the bottled water and snacks, I wondered why go the extra mile to alienate customers by witholding information they can use to decided whether or not to stay in line.

Until this weekend, I was a very happy and loyal Apple customer. I have 6 (yes, 6–and trust me, they all serve a useful and necessary purpose) Apple computers at home. I have evangelized Apple computers, at the company I co-founded, for over 5 years. I even used a PowerBook G4 and MacBook Pro while I was working for Siemens–an all Windows shop (~450,000 employees in the Active Directory GAL–one of the largest in the world). At the startup where I am currently working, we use Apple computers exclusively (except for Linux servers). In addition to the 6 Macs, we have two iPhones, an AppleTV, a Time Capsule, and 4 Airport Expresses. Additionally, in the past 7 years, I have owned two additional Macs (sold them on eBay), and Apple software and countless Apple accessories. I mention all of this simplly to say–I think I qualify as a good Apple customer.

As for AT&T, we have a family plan ($149/mo plus extra texting) with two iPhones and an additional user. Unlimited texting for one iPhone, and the additional phone. Additionally, I have an AT&T 3G card for my MacBook Pro ($60/month). I think we also qualify as a good AT&T customer.

So, why do Apple and AT&T treat me like a “new” customer?

They treat me like a new customer by forcing me to stand in line at their stores with no guarantee that I will be able to purchase the latest object of my desire. By doing this, they risk alienating a long-term customer, fan and evangelist. Seth Godin recently blogged about this in a post entitled “Scarcity“. He addressed this specific issue. He says,

The danger is that you can kill long-term loyalty. You can annoy your best customers. You can spread negative word of mouth. You can train people to hate your scarcity strategy (Apple did all four this weekend).

The problem is that our kneejerk way of dealing with scarcity is to treat everyone the same and to have people ‘pay’ by spending time to indicate their desire.

Waiting in line is a very old-school way of dealing with scarcity. And treating new customers like old customers, treating unknown customers the same as high-value customers is painful and unnecessary.

So, Apple knew the iPhone 3G would be a hot item. To think that the Apple and AT&T marketing groups may have conspired to create even more “scarcity” to drive additional sales makes the pain they subjected their best customers to this weekend even more incredible.

Seth goes on to talk about 5 principles on managing the relationship with your best customers.

Principle 1: Use the internet to form a queue. If you have a scarce product, you almost certainly know it’s scarce in advance. Instead of taxing customers by wasting their time, reward the early shoppers by taking orders online. A month before sale date, for example, tell them it’s coming. If you sell out before ship date, that’s great, because next time people will be even quicker to order when they hear about what you’ve got. (And you can do this in the real world, too–postcards with numbers or even playing cards work just fine.)A hot band that regularly sells out on the road, for example, could put a VIP serial number inside every CD or t-shirt they sell. Use that to pre-order your tix.

Principle 2: Give the early adopters a reward. In the case of Apple, I would have made the first 100,000 phones a different color. Then, instead of the buyer being a hero for ten seconds, he gets to be a hero for a year.

Principle 3: Treat different customers differently. Apple, for example, knows how to contact every single existing customer. Why not offer VIP status to big spenders? Or to those that make a lot of calls? Let them cut the line. It’s not fair? What’s fair mean? I can’t think of anything more fair than treating the people who treat you well, better.

Principle 4: When things happen in real time, you’re way more likely to screw up. One of the giant advantages of the Net is that you can fix things before the whole world notices. Try to do your rollout in small sections, so you can fix mistakes before you hurt the very people you’re trying to embrace.

Principle 5: Give your early adopters a forum to celebrate. A place to brag or demonstrate or show off or share insights and ideas. Amplify the heroes, which is far better than amplifying the pain of standing in line.

Imagine what the Apple and AT&T stores would have been like this weekend if they were filled with happy customers who had pre-paid, pre-registered and were just dropping in for three minutes to pick up their (very coveted) phones, walking up the VIP line, past all the others just waiting for a chance to buy one…

Imagine…

Oh, and I still don’t have my 16 GB Black iPhone 3G. I finally resorted to ordering it through an AT&T store–although they aren’t sure if I will get it in 3 days or a month!

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Sphere: Related Content

Leopard Puts Vista To Shame In Corporate Satisfaction Survey

Corporate users of Apple Inc.’s Leopard operating system are more than five times more likely to say that they are “very satisfied” with the OS than business users of Microsoft Corp.’s Windows Vista, a research firm said Wednesday.

In a February survey of 2,200 U.S. corporate computer users, 53% of those using Mac OS X 10.5 reported that they were very satisfied with their operating system. Of those using Windows XP or Windows Vista, however, 40% of the former and only 8% of the latter said they were very satisfied.

But while Apple shows some sales strength even as the general pace of U.S. corporate computer sales looks to slow in the next quarter, it remains a minor player in the market, reported ChangeWave. More than half — 53% — of the computers companies plan to buy in the second quarter will be equipped with Windows XP, the survey said, compared to 20% with a version of Windows Vista and just 8% with Mac OS X.

“Apple continues to set the standard for corporate customer satisfaction,” said Paul Carton, director of research at ChangeWave Research. That, and the fact that corporate buying plans for Macs remain at historically high levels, indicate that users like what Apple’s doing, continued Carton.

read more | digg story

Sphere: Related Content

Hello, gorgeous! Meet the laptop you’ll use in 2015

I found a very interesting Computerworld article:

A lot has changed in the 20 years since the first laptop computers appeared, including gigahertz processors, color screens, optical drives and wireless data. However, one thing that has stubbornly stayed the same is the conventional clamshell format with its hinged display lid that opens to reveal a mechanical keyboard.

That’s about to change. The rules of notebook design and the components that go inside are being rewritten to make the road a better place to work and play.

The CPU’s front-side bus will likely disappear by 2015. The bus acts like a traffic cop, sending data to the different parts of the system at a slower speed than the computational core. In its place will be an integrated controller that makes this distribution of data much more efficient by operating faster.

Currently, adding 64GB of solid state capacity to a notebook’s hard drive runs an extra $1,000. By 2015, the typical mainstream notebook could be outfitted with a 2TB hard disk drive, which should be plenty of room for even the biggest data hog, the experts speculated. For smaller and lighter machines, look to having something like 250GB of flash memory at your disposal, but it will likely come at a small premium.

read more | digg story

Sphere: Related Content

DRM, Digital Content, and the Consumer Experience: Lessons Learned From The Music Industry

Sphere: Related Content

The trouble with Steve Jobs

A friend of mine pointed me to an interesting article about the personality traits/flaws of Steve Jobs and the impact, both real and imagined on the stockholders of Apple (for purposes of disclosure, I am a stockholder). The article is worth reading and raises several issues germane to the issue of disclosure to shareholders. The core issue is summarized in the prologue:

Jobs likes to make his own rules, whether the topic is computers, stock options, or even pancreatic cancer. The same traits that make him a great CEO drive him to put his company, and his investors, at risk.

My reaction is typical of these pieces. The author, Peter Elkind, is a typical investigative journalist who has never sat behind a desk as an executive of a publicly traded company and endured the kind scrutiny he forces on others. He of course, has the advantage of hindsight to assist him as he passes judgment on decisions made by executives with less than perfect information.

It will be interesting to see if Jobs in another case of a celebrity (in this case a celebrity executive) built up by the media only to be torn down. I guess this would be the second time for Jobs.

read more | digg story

Sphere: Related Content

Apple TV Nails It the Second Time Around

Downloading and watching recent movies — in high-definition, from the comfort of your living room — is a stupendous experience. It could become habit-forming (exactly what Apple probably has in mind.)

read more | digg story

Sphere: Related Content

Mac OS X Leopard: A perfect 10?

Leopard BoxApple’s new operating system and its massive new feature set challenge users and developers to explore new and better ways of working. I don’t think Leopard is a perfect 10, but the author, Tom Yager, opines that Leopard’s many new features and underlying capabilities allow Leopard to “stay out of the user’s way while being a microsecond away from answering any user demand, and to make sure that the user never has to do anything twice.” This article is worth a read.

read more | digg story

Sphere: Related Content

The Map Just Changed

Green apple logoToday, Apple’s market cap exceeded that of IBM. Apple finished the day at $186.16 giving it a market cap of $161.89B (IBM’s market cap is at $156.01B). Makes you wonder about Apple’s 1984 Ad.

Over at bbum’s weblog-o-mat he has created a graph showing the relative market caps for the leading computer hardware companies. Over at SilliconValley.com, they point out,

And while Google-watchers go gaga over its soaring share price (see “A six-letter word for bubble? Try gasbag“), note that an investor who bought Apple on the same day Google stock debuted in 2004 would have, as of the close of market yesterday, made 40 percent more than if the same money had been put into the search sovereign’s shares.

Congratulation to Mr. Jobs and the entire Apple team on this truly amazing occasion!

Sphere: Related Content

Mac vs. PC Ads Getting Under Bill’s Skin

From this rant by Bill, it would appear those cute little Mac advertisements
are starting to get under Bill’s skin.

“I don’t think the over 90 percent of the [population] who use Windows PCs think of themselves as dullards, or the kind of klutzes that somebody is trying to say they are. … I don’t know why [Apple is] acting like it’s superior. I don’t even get it. What are they trying to say? Does honesty matter in these things, or if you’re really cool, that means you get to be a lying person whenever you feel like it? There’s not even the slightest shred of truth to it.”

Bill, take a deep breath. You are still the richest man in the world and everybody still likes you[your money].

Check out the rest of the rant at Good Morning Silicon Valley.

Sphere: Related Content