How and Why the iPhone Changes The Game


Whether you’re enamored with it, indifferent to it or deeply unimpressed, it’s hard to deny that the iPhone has spawned a revolution. This weekend’s extraordinary 3G iPhone debut is just another milestone on what has become an increasingly intriguing journey. But, where does it lead?

What’s the big deal?

Apple has its share of iPhone detractors, so before I declare that the revolution has begun (it is Bastille Day today) let’s take the position of the negs and the naysayers. Apple has undoubtedly made a whole series of “errors” with the iPhone. Here’s a list of the major foul-ups:

  1. The initial iPhone price was absurdly high. Certainly the initial gotta-getta type customers must have felt a little gouged. Apple dropped the price by $200 in a few months, in response to the falling off of sales. The phone rental deals were also high cost. Despite an incredibly successful marketing launch,  awash with free publicity (it made the news everywhere), the iPhone never made the hoped-for numbers.
  2. The iPhone made a bigger impact in the US than elsewhere, primarily because the mobile phone market here is so last-year-or-some-time-earlier. In truth the US was almost a third world mobile country until the iPhone arrived. The carriers even had to advertise to encourage users to send text messages. Aside from the finger-touch interface, the iPhone was nothing more than a mobile phone as far as Europe and the Far East were concerned. Cute and clever, but also unremarkable in many ways.
  3. Apple tried to re-form the whole industry around its product – as if that were possible. It wasn’t. Apple started off holding out for exclusive deals and ended up pushing non-exclusive deals as hard as it could. The 5-year exclusive deal with AT&T will be history when it expires. And having exclusive deals that prevent you from selling to a whole swathe of customers is a pretty dumb idea, all-in-all. To attract the carriers you have to drop the price, which is why the iPhone now costs $199.
  4. In the midst of all this, Apple has acted shabbily to the iPhone development community. First of all there wasn’t going to be a development community and then there was, but it was going to be organized along the lines of the Soviet Union and then suddenly, Apple loves iPhone developers. Now there’s a devoted route to market for them.
  5. The initial iPhone never had 3G. As far as mobile data users as were concerned, that was like a top-of-the-range BMW with a 1 liter engine. So Apple came to market with the product it originally should have made – a fully 3G enabled iPhone, a year late, making all existing iPhones obsolete as it did so. And to add insult to injury it was $200 cheaper.
  6. Technical Problems. When Apple did finally release the product that should have been, at the price that could have been, its servers collapse and the customers were left stranded unable to use the product they just bought. It was hard not to be unimpressed.

That’s the negative view and it makes some fair points. The loyalty of Apple customers is legendary and it has a thriving software development community on the Mac, but neither have been treated well in Apple’s attempt to invent a whole new market.

The Whole New Market

And that’s the point. It really is a completely new market. Apple has taken its customers on a bumpy ride so far, but I now believe that it’s been a bumpy ride to a highly profitable destination.

Take a step back. Have you noticed that pretty much all the new top-end mobile phone models are now  iPhone wannabes. They are also iPhone neverbes. That’s not because they can’t match Apple’s design excellence. They could go way past it and then some, and it would make no difference. This is not about the device any longer.

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  1. July 14th, 2008 at 15:06 | #1

    Couldn’t agree more. I have a first generation iPhone(after the price drop) and will get a 3G when the lines subside. (I don’t need it THAT bad) There are still some things that I do not like about my now obsolete iPhone, but overall the experience has been fantastic. I have continually been able to amaze friends and strangers with the ability to find any kind of information. Most of the time this has occurred at a hotspot, but even EDGE has come in handy more than a few times. It turns out that the information that I have used to great advantage the most has been the real time traffic on Google maps, but getting my email pretty much anywhere is great. Are there features that I would like to see? Absolutely. Is it a better phone than my wife’s Blackberry? No contest.

  2. July 14th, 2008 at 18:11 | #2

    Great post! I’m not sure if this will appear as a trackback here, but I just linked to this article from my blog post on the iPhone and its impact on banking:
    http://everythingcu.wordpress.com/2008/07/14/is-the-iphone-going-to-revolutionize-banking/

  3. iphoned
    August 9th, 2010 at 23:02 | #3

    Now, some months later as we’ve witnessed Android amazing success (at least as Google’s reporting activations go), would you still stand by the premise that “Apple has no competition.” Thoughts?

    • robinbloor
      August 10th, 2010 at 13:13 | #4

      No. I no longer think that. The market has moved on and Apple now has severe competition in Android. It’s now hard to call. Apple stilll has some commercial edges at the technology level, but it looks likely to me that Android will become the market leader. It’s too early to say whether that will also happen in the tablet market. I don’t see Apple getting crushed by Android. I expect the market to be split. But in such circumstances either competitor could get deflected by events or even “bad luck.”

  1. July 14th, 2008 at 17:52 | #1
  2. August 17th, 2008 at 10:59 | #2
  3. February 18th, 2009 at 08:15 | #3
  4. March 28th, 2009 at 13:06 | #4