Jones Beene wrote:

Don't you find it amusing that any in any new-but-old
technology, the proponents try to diferentiate
themselves on the slimest of variations.

The free market mantra seems to be, "If you cannot wow
them with novelty, then confuse them with sublety".

That happens a lot! Occasionally, however, you see the opposite marketing strategy, especially when the target buyers are ordinary members of the public rather than engineers. Companies try to disguise innovation and make it look like a minor incremental improvement. Many of the first word processors were disguised to look like typewriters, as I mentioned in chapter 7 of my book. "With ingenuity and extra effort, the limitations of the old were imposed on the new."

To take a more recent example, Toyota took extra effort to make the Prius look like a gasoline powered car rather than an electric car. Their message was "you never need to plug it in!" They still oppose the plug-in hybrid design because they fear it will "confuse" customers. They seem to have a low opinion of their customer's intelligence. They have badly misjudged their customers, who include many engineers and geeks who would love to plug in the car.

- Jed


Reply via email to