If Apple were a person, it wouldn’t be the type who runs
to catch a flight and skids up to the gate in a flop sweat.
Apple would
saunter, calm, and unhurried. Trying hard is not cool.
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But now the company has to hustle to please us finicky
consumers. What does effort look like for Apple? It’s an explosion of product
options.
Before he was Apple’s top executive,
Tim Cook bragged more than
a decade ago that all of the company’s products could fit on a table. His point
was that Apple focused on doing a tiny number of things exceptionally well. No
flop sweat.
Today, Apple is selling eight different models of the iPhone,
including versions released over the past few years. The company offers 10
different Mac computers and five
iPad editions. It also sells TV gadgets,
wristwatches, fitness and music software, home speakers, multiple models of
headphones, and on and on.
In a prerecorded video presentation on Tuesday, Apple will
discuss updated versions of some of its product lineup, which no longer fits on
a normal table. Apple now needs the table of the
UN Security Council to hold it
all.
Apple’s shift to YES, MORE is another sign of the transformation
of technology from occupying a nerdy niche to providing essential but ordinary
consumer products like cars or breakfast cereal. Manufacturers offer a flotilla
of options to satisfy any one of our potential whims and catch shoppers’ eyes.
Complexity is a sign that a company can no longer take its
customers for granted. It has to try hard to win us over.
(Photo: Apple)
This happened to Ford, too. There’s an old line by
Henry Ford
that a customer could have any color of car he wanted “as long as it’s black.”
Limited choice was a necessity when assembly line production was still new, but
the quip also showed the power that the early
Ford Motor Co. had over
customers. Cars were a novelty, and people took whatever they could get.
We know that consumer products are not like that anymore. Today
at Ford, you can choose from among eight truck models, including a Ford F-150
XLT, an F-150 Lariat, an F-150 King Ranch, an F-150 Platinum, and an F-150
Tremor. Black is definitely not the only option.
More options are great, but they can also be overwhelming. I bet
some new-car buyers have a hard time picking among those Ford trucks. Not long
ago I considered buying an Apple TV streaming gadget, and it took some hunting
to figure out the differences between the options that the company was selling.
I did not buy anything.
A side note: Maybe we don’t need Apple’s product infomercials,
like the one Tuesday, at all?
These staged presentations devoted to what feels like the 32nd
version of an iPad made slightly more sense when technology was confined to a
shiny thing in a box intended mostly for the 1 percent of die-hards. But now,
technology is everything and for everyone. And increasingly, it’s most useful
when we don’t notice it at all. That includes the smart software that nudges us
to read only the important emails or spots a faulty factory assembly line
before it breaks down.
Rant over — my point is that having choices is mostly good for
us. But it’s also weird for Apple. The company is a genius at product
segmentation, marketing, and pricing strategies but tends to behave as if it
just makes awesome products and where did these giant piles of cash come from?
No one wants to be a try-hard.
Apple has managed to preserve the image of being exclusive and
cool while selling one of the most widely used commodities on the planet.
Smartphones and many other
technologies in our lives are both extremely useful
necessities and completely normal.
It’s long past time to stop treating the companies behind them like wizards.
Apple now has nearly the array of product options that Cheerios
does. That should demystify the company a bit.
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