from the site : Daring fireball
 
 
John Gruber
 
 
 
A Big Misunderstanding
Thursday, 20 December 2012
Cliff Edwards’s 2001 “_Sorry,  Steve: Here’s Why Apple Stores Won’t Work_ 
(http://www.businessweek.com/stories/2001-05-20/commentary-sorry-steve-heres
-why-apple-stores-wont-work) ” piece for Businessweek is  deservingly 
notorious in the annals of claim chowder, but there are a few things  about it 
worth keeping in mind even today. There’s more to it than just a few  guys who 
were wrong about Apple’s prospects in retail. 
The first is that Edwards wasn’t out on a limb. In the investor and general 
 tech press, it was common at the outset to believe that Apple’s foray into 
 retail was folly. The second is that Edwards was more than just a little 
bit  wrong. He wasn’t merely implying that retail might prove difficult for 
Apple,  that success was a longshot. His argument, backed by quotes from 
analysts and  even former Apple CFO Joseph Graziano_1_ 
(http://daringfireball.net/2012/12/big_misunderstanding#fn1-2012-12-20) ,  was 
that Apple’s retail 
foray was surely doomed. His case was based on a severe  misunderstanding of 
Apple as a company, of its relationship with its customers,  and of its 
then-potential for the coming decade: 
The way Jobs sees it, the stores look to be a sure thing. But even if they  
attain a measure of success, few outsiders think new stores, no matter how  
well-conceived, will get Apple back on the hot-growth path. Jobs’s focus on 
 selling just a few consumer Macs has helped boost profits, but it is 
keeping  Apple from exploring potential new markets. And his perfectionist 
attention to  aesthetics has resulted in beautiful but pricey products with 
limited appeal  outside the faithful: Apple’s market share is a measly 2.8%. “
Apple’s problem  is it still believes the way to grow is serving caviar in a 
world that seems  pretty content with cheese and crackers,” gripes former 
Chief Financial  Officer Joseph Graziano. 
Rather than unveil a Velveeta Mac, Jobs thinks he can do a better job than  
experienced retailers at moving the beluga. Problem is, the numbers don’t 
add  up. Given the decision to set up shop in high-rent districts in 
Manhattan,  Boston, Chicago, and Jobs’s hometown of Palo Alto, Calif., the 
leases 
for  Apple’s stores could cost $1.2 million a year each, says David A. 
Goldstein,  president of researcher Channel Marketing Corp. Since PC retailing 
gross  margins are normally 10% or less, Apple would have to sell $12 million a 
year  per store to pay for the space. Gateway does about $8 million annually 
at each  of its Country Stores. Then there’s the cost of construction, 
hiring  experienced staff. “I give them two years before they’re turning out 
the  lights on a very painful and expensive mistake,” says  Goldstein.
Graziano’s caviar vs. cheese and crackers gets to the heart of what was —  
and, I think, remains today — profoundly misunderstood about Apple. First 
is  that the caviar vs. cheese and crackers analogy not very subtly implies  
exclusiveness and snobbery. That superiority and exclusivity inherently go  
hand-in-hand, and forever doom Apple to small market shares in the long run. 
 That the company’s market share success, as with the iPhone and especially 
the  iPad today, are short-term aberrations, and will collapse when fads 
change and  commodity-level competitors achieve a certain nebulous “good enough
” quality.  That every market inevitably will look like the PC market of 
the 1990s. That  Apple is misguided, because it insists upon selling boutique 
exclusiveness that  inherently limits the appeal of its products in tech 
product markets where mass  market scale is essential. What works for, say, 
actual caviar cannot work for a  large publicly-held computer maker. 
Part of that thinking is correct: scale matters. Apple today shows that. By 
 selling very large quantities of a remarkably small number of products, 
Apple  operates with economies of scale that are the envy of all its 
competitors. They  can negotiate better prices and _lock-in  supplies of 
crucial 
components such as flash memory chips_ 
(http://www.nytimes.com/2011/10/24/technology/apples-lower-prices-are-all-part-of-the-plan.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0)
 
. 
The part that’s wrong is the insistence that broad mass market appeal and 
an  insistence upon superior design are mutually exclusive. Apple’s brand 
stands for  both quality and inclusiveness. It’s a luxury brand for the masses. 
The  company’s retail stores exemplify this. They’re not stuffy or 
standoffish, like,  say, high-end jewelry or fashion stores. Apple’s stores are 
welcoming — crowded  and casual. Apple is like no other computer or gadget 
maker, and its stores are  like no others as well. 
What Apple understands and its critics did not (_and  still do not_ 
(http://www.businessweek.com/articles/2012-12-17/the-case-for-apples-stock-price-fal
ling-to-270) ) is that many people, from all walks of life, simply 
appreciate  nice things. They accuse Apple of pretension and elitism, but it’s 
they, 
the  critics, who hold that the mass market for phones and tablets is 
overwhelmingly  comprised of tasteless, fickle shoppers who neither discern nor 
care about  product quality. That Apple’s lead in these categories is simply 
because they  were first out of the gate in them, not because their products 
are so good. 
Advertising alone can’t convince customers that products are nice, because  
all ads claim every product is great. You need to see things, to touch and 
try  them, to truly believe. That’s a problem Apple’s retail stores helped 
solved.  That’s a reason why, today, _Apple is  working with the ultimate 
mass-market retailer, Wal-Mart_ 
(http://daringfireball.net/linked/2012/12/18/walmart-iphone) , to get iPhones 
and  iPads into the hands of more potential 
customers (including expanding their  market to include more people who do 
prioritize low prices). 
Apple is not selling caviar against cheese and crackers. They’re selling  
better-tasting cheese and crackers, and all you have to do is come into their 
 store and taste some to believe for yourself. Anyone who believes Apple is 
about  to have the rug pulled out from under the iPhone and iPad by 
commoditized  Android devices should spend a few minutes inside an Apple retail 
store this  holiday week. 
By the way, in case you’re curious, _Gateway is still in  business_ 
(http://us.gateway.com/gw/en/US/content/home) . 
  
____________________________________
  
    1.  Graziano’s time at Apple goes back to the dark days. He quit in 
1995 after  losing a boardroom showdown with then-CEO Michael Spindler. 
Graziano, _according  to this report from the LA Times_ 
(http://articles.latimes.com/1995-10-05/business/fi-53559_1_joseph-graziano) , 
“become convinced that 
the personal  computer maker no longer has the wherewithal to go it alone” 
and wanted to  sell the company. Spindler, bless his heart, was of the opinion 
that Apple  should and could remain independent. _↩_ 
(http://daringfireball.net/2012/12/big_misunderstanding#fnr1-2012-12-20) 

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