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 ContentTag Archive for 'iphone'
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!
Sphere: Related ContentFinally!
To get started, you must first enable IMAP in your Gmail settings.
To enable IMAP in your Gmail account:
- Log in to your Gmail account.
- Click Settings at the top of any Gmail page.
- Click Forwarding and POP/IMAP.
- Select Enable IMAP.
- Configure your IMAP client* and click Save Changes.
iPhone setup instructions:
Update: Some additional setup instructions to properly setup folder with Gmail labels and also setting up Junk, Sent and Draft can be found at http://5thirtyone.com/archives/862
Update 2: Here are some recommended settings for Gmail IMAP
As a general rule, we suggest the following.
Sending:
- Do NOT save sent messages on the server. If your client is sending mail through Gmail’s SMTP server, your sent messages will be automatically copied to the [Gmail]/Sent Mail folder.
- DO save draft messages on the server. If you want your drafts in your mail client to sync correctly with your Gmail account’s web interface, set your client to save drafts to the [Gmail]/Drafts folder.
Deleting:
- Do NOT save deleted messages on the server. Messages that are deleted from an IMAP folder (except for those in [Gmail]/Spam or [Gmail]/Trash) only have that label removed and still exist in All Mail. Hence, your client doesn’t need to store an extra copy of a deleted message.
- Do NOT save deleted messages to your [Gmail]/Trash folder because this will delete a message in all folders.
- Do NOT save deleted messages to your [Gmail]/All Mail folder as some clients will try to empty this folder and ultimately fail. This can lead to delayed mail access or unnecessary battery consumption on a mobile device.
Junk mail and spam:
- Do NOT enable your client’s junk mail filters. Gmail’s spam filters also work in your IMAP client, and we recommend turning off any additional anti-spam or junk mail filters within your client. Your client’s filter will attempt to download and classify all of your existing messages, which may slow down your client until the process is complete.
For your specific mail client:
http://mail.google.com/support/bin/answer.py?answer=78892
Sphere: Related ContentDear Mr. Jobs,
Recently at MacWorld 2007 you introduced the iPhone to raving audience and analyst reviews. I don’t remember any product that has been so eagerly anticipated and then exceeded our collective wildest expectations. I must admit, I want one, I want one bad. My wife wants one, even the Microsoft employees on my flight home from CES (I clearly attended the wrong show) want one! What’s not to like? Revolutionary mobile phone, iPod and Internet communicator all in one sleek device, we all marvel at how you folks at Apple do it. Congratulations to everyone at Apple on what will surely be more than just a successful new product, but a category redefining innovation!
However, during your keynote presentation you indicated that Apple has entered into an exclusive agreement with AT&T, in the US, as the mobile service provider for the iPhone. It is our understanding that the iPhone will work exclusively with AT&T and that consumers with other mobile service providers will not be able to use the iPhone unless they switch to AT&T. The question on many of our minds is why? Why tie this revolutionary product exclusively to AT&T?
We were all astounded as you demonstrated the many revolutionary capabilities of the iPhone. What stood out was the category defining user experience of the iPhone. You have left the traditional handset companies in the dust! What you must realize, is you have left an important part of the overall iPhone user experience in the hands of AT&T. While AT&T believes they have the most reliable network in the US, they certainly have the most reliably poor customer service. The iPhone, the network and the customer service all combine to create the “iPhone experience”. Apple has clearly done its part to create a wonderful user experience, are you sure you want to leave the rest in the hands of AT&T’s infamous customer service?
As you are probably aware, AT&T rated at the bottom of a recent Consumer Reports survey of 42,921 readers. My personal experience echoes that of the Consumer Reports readers. I work for a large multi-national company, part of the Fortune 500. We use AT&T, almost exclusively and have close to 50,000 (my guess based on our 70,000+ US employees) business accounts with them. Even with such a large account, I am rarely treated with the respect that is warranted such a large account. How will AT&T treat your (Apple) customers?
I was amazed at the press reports describing the statements from AT&T about their “agreement” with Apple. They certainly sounded arrogant and were gloating over “bending” Apple to conform to their terms. Is this true? For what possible reason would Apple need to “bend” to sign an exclusive deal with AT&T? Surely you have read the reports of AT&T’s gloating over at PCMag (you do read PCMag occasionally, right?). Cingular makes Apple Bend.
It certainly makes sense that there is a lot of work in putting together a feature like Visual Voicemail, and doing the work over and over with other service providers is costly. However, this cannot be the reason for linking iPhone exclusively to AT&T. Why then?
In stark contrast to the exclusivity with AT&T, your selection of GSM as the network technology was an excellent choice. GSM is a standard that allows the iPhone to be used almost anywhere on the planet and with leading service providers. GSM also allows for interchangeable SIM cards to link a GSM handset with a particular service provider. The iPhone has a SIM card slot and could therefore easily be linked to any GSM compatible service provider–a service provider chosen by Apple customers not by Apple corporate.
Mr. Jobs, please let us select our own service provider. Open the iPhone to other service providers or create an “unlocked” version of the iPhone. Let your customers decide which service provider to choose to complete the iPhone experience.
Best regards,
Ryan Petty
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