Has Apple Peaked?
By JOE NOCERA
Published: September 21, 2012 

If Steve Jobs were still alive, would the new map application on the iPhone
5 be such an unmitigated disaster? Interesting question, isn't it? 

As Apple's chief executive, Jobs was a perfectionist. He had no tolerance
for corner-cutting or mediocre products. The last time Apple released a
truly substandard product - MobileMe, in 2008 - Jobs gathered the team into
an auditorium, berated them mercilessly and then got rid of the team leader
in front of everybody, according to Walter Isaacson's biography of Jobs. The
three devices that made Apple the most valuable company in America - the
iPod, the iPhone and the iPad - were all genuine innovations that forced
every other technology company to play catch-up. 

No doubt, the iPhone 5, which went on sale on Friday, will be another hit.
Apple's halo remains powerful. But there is nothing about it that is
especially innovative. Plus, of course, it has that nasty glitch. In rolling
out a new operating system for the iPhone 5, Apple replaced Google's map
application - the mapping gold standard - with its own, vastly inferior,
application, which has infuriated its customers. With maps now such a
critical feature of smartphones, it seems to be an inexplicable mistake. 

And maybe that's all it is - a mistake, soon to be fixed. But it is just as
likely to turn out to be the canary in the coal mine. Though Apple will
remain a highly profitable company for years to come, I would be surprised
if it ever gives us another product as transformative as the iPhone or the
iPad. 

Part of the reason is obvious: Jobs isn't there anymore. It is rare that a
company is so completely an extension of one man's brain as Apple was an
extension of Jobs. While he was alive, that was a strength; now it's a
weakness. Apple's current executive team is no doubt trying to maintain the
same demanding, innovative culture, but it's just not the same without the
man himself looking over everybody's shoulder. If the map glitch tells us
anything, it is that. 

But there is also a less obvious - yet possibly more important - reason that
Apple's best days may soon be behind it. When Jobs returned to the company
in 1997, after 12 years in exile, Apple was in deep trouble. It could afford
to take big risks and, indeed, to search for a new business model, because
it had nothing to lose. 

Fifteen years later, Apple has a hugely profitable business model to defend
- and a lot to lose. Companies change when that happens. "The business model
becomes a gilded cage, and management won't do anything to challenge it,
while doing everything they can to protect it," says Larry Keeley, an
innovation strategist at Doblin, a consulting firm. 

It happens in every industry, but it is especially easy to see in technology
because things move so quickly. It was less than 15 years ago that Microsoft
appeared to be invincible. But once its Windows operating system and Office
applications became giant moneymakers, Microsoft's entire strategy became
geared toward protecting its two cash cows. It ruthlessly used its Windows
platform to promote its own products at the expense of rivals. (The
Microsoft antitrust trial took dead aim at that behavior.) Although
Microsoft still makes billions, its new products are mainly "me-too"
versions of innovations made by other companies. 

Now it is Apple's turn to be king of the hill - and, not surprisingly, it
has begun to behave in a very similar fashion. You can see it in the patent
litigation against Samsung, a costly and counterproductive exercise that has
nothing to do with innovation and everything to do with protecting its turf.


And you can see it in the decision to replace Google's map application. Once
an ally, Google is now a rival, and the thought of allowing Google to
promote its maps on Apple's platform had become anathema. More to the point,
Apple wants to force its customers to use its own products, even when they
are not as good as those from rivals. Once companies start acting that way,
they become vulnerable to newer, nimbler competitors that are trying to
create something new, instead of milking the old. Just ask BlackBerry, which
once reigned supreme in the smartphone market but is now roadkill for Apple
and Samsung. 

Even before Jobs died, Apple was becoming a company whose main goal was to
defend its business model. Yes, he would never have allowed his minions to
ship such an embarrassing application. But despite his genius, it is
unlikely he could have kept Apple from eventually lapsing into the ordinary.
It is the nature of capitalism that big companies become defensive, while
newer rivals emerge with better, smarter ideas. 

"Oh my god," read one Twitter message I saw. "Apple maps is the worst ever.
It is like using MapQuest on a BlackBerry." 

MapQuest and BlackBerry. 

Exactly. 

A version of this op-ed appeared in print on September 22, 2012, on page A23
of the New York edition with the headline: Has Apple Peaked?

Original Article at:
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/09/22/opinion/nocera-has-apple-peaked.html?_r=0


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