Top-Rated Free Essay
Preview

Apple Will Destroy It's Greatest Product

Good Essays
3734 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Apple Will Destroy It's Greatest Product
A Motley Fool Special Report

9/2/13 1:18 PM

Apple Will Destroy Its Greatest Product
Truly revolutionary products are rare. Products of this caliber create history, push industries forward, signal paradigm shifts, and redefine the way we live.
Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL) has brought not just one, but several products of this magnitude to market over the decades. When Steve Jobs introduced the iPhone in 2007, here's how he put it:
Every once in a while, a revolutionary product comes along that changes everything. One is very fortunate if you get to work on just one of these in your career. Apple has been very fortunate; it's been able to introduce a few of these into the world. In 1984, we introduced the Macintosh. It didn't just change Apple -- it changed the whole computer industry. In 2001, we introduced the first iPod, and it didn't just change the way we all listened to music -- it changed the entire music industry.
Over the coming years, the product unveiled that fateful day would indeed proceed to change the entire smartphone industry. A few years after that, the iPad would jumpstart the tablet renaissance, after the first tablet movement fell flat because the segmented value chain failed to deliver a compelling product.
As unique as Apple has been in its ability to create so many revolutionary products throughout its turbulent history, it's also unlike other companies in that Apple shows no fear whatsoever in actively destroying its greatest successes of the past. For this reason, Apple will again predictably destroy its greatest product when the time is right. But to really illustrate this point, we have to go all the way back to 1984...

Back to the Mac
In the early days of computing, arguably before computers were really considered "personal" on a mainstream level, interfaces were largely text-based command lines. Back then, computers used operating systems like DOS, which required users to be familiar with specific command prompts or risk running into the dreaded syntax error. Even the Apple II used a textual interface.
Needless to say, this computing paradigm was far from approachable for the average consumer, which is why personal computers were largely a niche product at the time. Apple would soon develop and launch the Macintosh in 1984, with its revolutionary graphical user interface, or GUI, heralding a new era of truly personal computing with a user-friendly interface that the average consumer could learn to use.
Original Macintosh GUI. Source: Wikimedia.
GUIs had already been implemented in industrial computers (such as at Xerox PARC, where Jobs first saw a
GUI), but this was the first time a company put a lot of weight into widespread consumer commercialization. A few years later, Microsoft would release Windows, which featured a GUI. The rest, as they say, is history.
Of course, Microsoft's rise to ubiquity is well-documented, as is Apple's flirtation with bankruptcy, despite the revolutionary impacts of the original Mac. However, after Steve Jobs returned to Apple in 1997 and reinvigorated the company with the iMac, things began to turn around. The Mac became a great product again, even though it was relegated to single-digit market share figures and the company was in the midst of a multiyear turnaround http://www.fool.com/free-report/stock-advisor/apple-will-destroy-its…tmail.com&iid=42051843&repeatecap=n&vsaid=5478&src=isaeditxt0900025 Page 1 of 9

A Motley Fool Special Report

9/2/13 1:18 PM

under Jobs' second tenure.
In many ways, the Mac was the first modern PC with a GUI, and has always defined what a PC should be. Only in relatively recent years has Apple's PC market share begun to climb meaningfully. The company is now into double-digit territory in the U.S. market. Yet Apple is the biggest champion of the
"Post-PC" era, a term widely popularized by Steve Jobs. Although that hasn't stopped
Apple from continued development and innovation in Macs, even though its importance to overall financial results continues to decline.
Source: SEC filings. Fiscal quarters shown.
As Apple expanded into music players, smartphones, and tablets, the Mac has not only taken a back seat to those product categories, but it has become a clear victim of a secular trend that Apple is largely responsible for catalyzing. The smartphone and tablet markets are only where they are today because of Apple, and combined they exert incredible downward pressure on PC sales through the form of lengthened upgrade cycles and outright cannibalization.
With current CEO Tim Cook's predictions that the tablet market will soon eclipse the
PC market, the Mac's future prospects are muted. Apple was fully aware that the mobile revolution would add to Mac cannibalization, yet it has no qualms contributing to its downfall.
The Mac isn't the only victim of Apple's self-cannibalization...

The Rise and Fall of the iPod
Apple's second big breakthrough product was the iPod, which revolutionized the portable music player market.
Much of this success can also be attributed to launching the iTunes Music Store, which allowed users an easy way to legally purchase digital music, an important distinction since piracy was rampant at the time. http://www.fool.com/free-report/stock-advisor/apple-will-destroy-its…tmail.com&iid=42051843&repeatecap=n&vsaid=5478&src=isaeditxt0900025 Page 2 of 9

A Motley Fool Special Report

9/2/13 1:18 PM

The iPod became another category-defining product that helped catapult Apple's brand image just four years after Jobs' return during the company's darkest days. The device proved Apple's capability to design a product that consumers didn't know they wanted but would eventually find it hard to live without, cementing Jobs' status as a visionary leader.
Since Apple was able to quickly grab and maintain more than 70% market share of music players, Apple's brand became synonymous with music devices and even Apple's iconic headphones became a pop culture phenomenon.
Apple has long described the "halo" effect that it observed after launching the iPod. Since the iPod and Mac were integrated so seamlessly, iPod sales helped boost Mac unit sales as consumers prefer devices that work well together. iPods and Macs are complementary products, and as such they helped sell each other. There was simply no threat of cannibalization here.
The iPod was absolutely a great product that shifted the broader music industry by setting the standard for digital distribution and demonstrating that music player interfaces didn't have to be overly complicated. It spurred a string of entrants into the music player market hoping to grab a piece of Apple's success, including Microsoft's
Zune, among many, many others.
Source: SEC filings. Fiscal quarters shown.
The iPod's financial importance was steadily rising and peaked at 40% of TTM sales.
This was coming from a product category that had previously lacked leadership and all of this revenue was entirely incremental upside. However, that all changed with the iPhone, and then later with the iPad. You could even argue that the iPod is the perfect example of Apple's self-cannibalization, since the iPhone and iPad are definitive substitutes for the music player. By incorporating iPod functionalities directly into iPhones and iPads, declining iPod sales were simply inevitable. Source: SEC filings. Fiscal quarters shown.
If we consider the iPod business in dollar terms, it's not surprising that iPod revenue peaked just six quarters after the iPhone's launch. Revenue pulled back and began to stagnate, and then plunged shortly after the iPad's launch. Yet, despite the fact that the iPod is now merely 3% of sales, Apple continues to innovate and introduce new designs for its iPod subfamilies. The iPod Touch and iPod Nano recently received complete (and expensive from manufacturing and cost curve standpoints) industrial redesigns. When it comes to internal resource allocation, http://www.fool.com/free-report/stock-advisor/apple-will-destroy-its…tmail.com&iid=42051843&repeatecap=n&vsaid=5478&src=isaeditxt0900025 Page 3 of 9

A Motley Fool Special Report

9/2/13 1:18 PM

most companies follow strict policies that send development dollars to the biggest revenue generators. Apple bucks this trend and keeps upgrading the iPod, even though the average MBA student would probably look down on the practice.
It was always inevitable that multifunction smartphones would eventually replace single-purpose music players. As the dominant music player vendor, Apple had the most to lose from this transition -- but that didn't stop it from fully embracing the smartphone. The market positioning is very different from in PCs, where Windows PCs have more to lose from rising mobile adoption.
The iPod was easily Apple's greatest product for many years, but Apple didn't even hesitate to crush one of its most successful businesses. That said, Apple doesn't always need to come up with new product categories to demonstrate its propensity to cannibalize itself...

Keeping It in the Family
Even within product families, Apple has shown it doesn't simply rest on its laurels. The company has shown a penchant for moving downmarket at times in order to broaden its appeal and user base. This is also an anomaly in many companies, since most executives and investors balk at the idea of voluntarily putting downward pressure on average selling prices and margins unless absolutely necessary.
As the iPod gained popularity, Apple subsequently introduced the iPod Mini, iPod Shuffle, and iPod Nano, all of which targeted lower price points and led to a precipitous drop in its average selling price (ASP). The iPod Touch was launched shortly after the iPhone, but by then there was no hope of the iPod's ASP ever reclaiming its former glory. Source: SEC filings. Fiscal quarters shown.
Those smaller iPods couldn't serve as complete substitutes for full-featured iPods with greater storage capacity, since this was before the days of cloud storage and streaming options. Still, there was always the risk that they could serve as sufficient alternatives to flagship iPods and some cannibalization would occur. That didn't stop
Apple.
The most recent example of the same strategy comes with the iPad Mini. Apple positions the iPad Mini as very much an iPad alternative, making sure it has all the same features of the larger model but just packed into a smaller form factor. This fact virtually guarantees a high level of cannibalization, and just one quarter after launch Apple posted a meaningful decline in iPad ASP. Apple isn't perturbed by this decline, even if Wall Street is. http://www.fool.com/free-report/stock-advisor/apple-will-destroy-its…tmail.com&iid=42051843&repeatecap=n&vsaid=5478&src=isaeditxt0900025

Page 4 of 9

A Motley Fool Special Report

9/2/13 1:18 PM

Source: SEC filings. Fiscal quarters shown.
Speculation continues to swirl that Apple is preparing a similar move with the iPhone.
Thus far, Apple's iPhone strategy has been to gradually move older generation models down, but that may change this year if
Apple launches a fresh iPhone model targeting mid-range price points. This will naturally push iPhone ASP down, but the upside will be increased adoption and unit sales. Once again, some cannibalization of the flagship model is expected. Once again, this concern isn't stopping Apple, in part because the company has figured out the key to successful cannibalization...

The Key to Successful Cannibalization
Over the past few decades, Apple has demonstrated a unique willingness to selfcannibalize its greatest products, starting with the Mac and then with the iPod. Right now, the iPhone and iPad are unarguably
Apple's greatest products. The iPhone made capacitive touchscreen interfaces the norm, while the iPad continues to define and lead the tablet market.
If history repeats itself (which it has a tendency of doing), Apple will eventually crush both the iPhone and iPad. Make no mistake: This outcome is inevitable.
Mere mortals aren't privy to the details about how or when this will happen, or what product Apple will devise to do the dirty deed. The most possible new product categories that
Apple may soon enter are smart watches and smart TVs, which would seemingly be complementary devices rather than substitutes and thus not be a direct threat to the iPhone and iPad.

TREND TRACKER: Is TV Dead?
Every year, growing numbers of Americans are "cutting the cord" on the cable TV providers... leaving a vulnerable $2.2 trillion industry up for grabs. As we speak, tech giants like Apple and Google are battling for control. But three surprise companies may be the real victors in this behind the scenes TV takeover. Find out who they are before all the profits dry up!

http://www.fool.com/free-report/stock-advisor/apple-will-destroy-its…tmail.com&iid=42051843&repeatecap=n&vsaid=5478&src=isaeditxt0900025

Page 5 of 9

A Motley Fool Special Report

9/2/13 1:18 PM

However, the smart watch notion represents an entirely new frontier of technology in wearable computing, a broad category that could threaten smartphones. Eventually, the iPhone and iPad will become as financially unimportant as the Mac and iPod are today, even though that day is many years away.
The important thing for Apple is that it's been able to undermine its previous successes in a way that keeps it at the forefront of evolving trends in consumer technology. This is the key to successful cannibalization: Apple's sole focus is simply to create great products. So long as Apple is able to continue executing this task, cannibalization becomes an afterthought.
Tim Cook has said that once cannibalization becomes a determining factor in choosing which products to pursue and which not to, a company has already lost sight of what's really important: the customer. One of Steve Jobs' favorite quotes came from hockey legend Wayne Gretzky: "I skate to where the puck is going to be, not where it has been." Jobs also always said it was better for Apple to cannibalize itself instead of waiting for a rival to do so.
That's how Apple stays a great company. To learn about more quality companies like Apple, keep reading.

Get 10 More Stock Picks -- FREE
I hope you've enjoyed this special report as much as we enjoyed preparing it for you.
Now let me introduce myself. My name is Jordan DiPietro. I'm the executive publisher of Motley Fool Stock Advisor.
As you may know, it's our passion at The Motley Fool to help individual investors build lasting wealth with the very best investments. So it may come as no surprise that Motley Fool Co-founders David and Tom Gardner have Apple counted among the stocks they've recommended to members of their Motley Fool Stock Advisor newsletter community.
And as a special thank you for reading this report, I'd also like to send you a free copy of Motley Fool Fight Night!
5 Stock Rivalries Shaping the Future. In this, you'll find 10 more powerful stock ideas. These 10 top stocks in this exhaustive equity research report set you up with just about everything you need to make this the year you BEAT
UP on the market!
Hearing about rock-solid opportunities like these early is why year after year investors have gladly paid $99 for this valuable report -- but you can have it right now for free!
Here's how:
Join me and Motley Fool co-founders David and Tom Gardner at Motley Fool Stock Advisor at the special reduced rate for new members. An entire year of honest, straightforward advice along with stock recommendations for more than 75% OFF!

Here's how it works...
Every month, you'll receive the Motley Fool Stock
Advisor advisory letter in the mail. You'll even be alerted by email the moment it is available online, so you can ac-

TREND TRACKER: 3x Gains in 2012!
One tech phenomenon seems to be on tip of every investor's tongue...

http://www.fool.com/free-report/stock-advisor/apple-will-destroy-its…tmail.com&iid=42051843&repeatecap=n&vsaid=5478&src=isaeditxt0900025

Page 6 of 9

A Motley Fool Special Report

cess it instantly.
Each Stock Advisor issue reveals not one but two TOP stocks -- handpicked and thoroughly researched by David and Tom -- that are poised to CRUSH the S&P 500 over the next three years.

9/2/13 1:18 PM

And now, YOU can unlock the incredible profit power of the 3D
Printing revolution. All the details are inside an eye-opening video report that will introduce you to the world of "additive manufacturing" and the three big players behind it. In fact, just last year, this advice would've TRIPLED your money. So don't delay!

You also get the full rationale behind every recommendation, including any potential risks, so you'll have everything you need to make your own sound investment decisions.
Plus, when you accept this special invitation for first-time subscribers to the Stock Advisor community today, you'll also receive these features, benefits, and bonuses:
Live Interactive Stock Scorecard -- Our scorecard lets you keep track of how we're doing relative to the S&P 500 and how David and Tom are doing against each other. You'll receive a scorecard in each printed issue. And the scorecard is online as well, where it's constantly updated throughout the trading day. You can click through to get more information on all our picks, including back issues, updates, discussion boards, and much more.
Weekly Updates -- We'll send you updates every week so you get all the important information you need to know about right away -- from buying and selling a stock to our analysis of a specific development. You'll also have access to all previous updates on our members-only website.
All Back Issues -- Every back issue of the newsletter is archived on the site, so you can read every recommendation we've ever published.
Discussion Boards -- Where else can you learn about a stock directly from the candid experiences of the company's employees, customers, and investors? I don't know of any other newsletter or investment advisor or brokerage house that would welcome this type of frank exchange between its customers. But it's all part of the philosophy here at The Motley Fool.
I've been told by some members that Motley Fool Stock Advisor is like an investment university. It's certainly an active community of smart investors. You can join David and Tom Gardner -- and your fellow members -- online in spirited discussions. Or you can sit back and simply follow the wealth-building recommendations...
Some advisory services charge hundreds of dollars for access to their "premium" services. But access to our world-class members-only website... and all its powerful moneymaking resources... is yours today at a DEEP DISCOUNT...
When you join today, an entire year of the world's most popular and successful investment advisory service, Motley Fool Stock Advisor only costs you $49. That's a savings of more than 75%.
Plus, " Motley Fool Fight Night! 5 Stock Rivalries Shaping the Future", a $99 value, is also yours FREE the instant you sign up!
And if saving $150 off the regular membership rate and receiving our $99 Motley Fool Fight Night! 5 Stock Rivalries
Shaping the Future report, free, is something you like -- HERE'S AN EVEN BETTER DEAL!
If you join us right now through this special offer -- because this is only available for a limited time to new memhttp://www.fool.com/free-report/stock-advisor/apple-will-destroy-its…tmail.com&iid=42051843&repeatecap=n&vsaid=5478&src=isaeditxt0900025

Page 7 of 9

A Motley Fool Special Report

9/2/13 1:18 PM

bers -- I'll send you a bundle of timely investment reports, valued at nearly $100, also for free! MAKING THIS
SPECIAL OFFER EVEN BETTER!

Grab your FREE bundle of exclusive Stock Advisor investment reports (valued at close to $100) today!
6 Danger Signs in 5 Minutes – (a $29 value – YOURS FREE!) – These quick and easy checks will help you sniff out "creative accounting," fictitious revenue, and other ways companies can seek to deceive their stockholders.
These shortcuts will help you cut through balance-sheet chicanery like a laser.
How to Know When to Sell – (a $29 value – YOURS FREE!) – David and Tom don't believe in selling before a company's fundamentals change dramatically (or you find an even better company). But it is necessary now and then. In this special report, "How to Know When to Sell," they reveal their simple, easy methods for quickly assessing your stocks, based on fundamentals.
Investing the Stock Advisor Way – (a $29 value – YOURS FREE!) – What's the secret formula behind Stock Advisor's success? All is revealed in "Investing the Stock Advisor Way." Discover the strategies The Motley Fool cofounders use to pick so many triple-digit winners and help their readers beat the market by 82 percentage points.
Inside this special report you'll learn the full details of their seven key investment principles, plus the individual stock-picking rules they follow to uncover their biggest wins. If you're serious about your investments (and who isn't these days?), this is one report you won't want to miss.
These three reports, along with Motley Fool Fight Night! 5 Stock Rivalries Shaping the Future, are yours free the instant you sign up! PLUS here's why you can join us at Stock Advisor today with complete confidence:

Your special "keep everything" & "lose nothing" -- DOUBLE GUARANTEE
Because we stand behind every piece of advice, insight, and recommendation -- I'd like to offer you the opportunity to position yourself to make a pile of money and soak up all the recommendations that Motley Fool Stock Advisor has to offer -- WITHOUT ANY RISK WHATSOEVER. Here's how it'll work...
You can tell me to send your money back, up to the last day of your first month. And I'll give you a COMPLETE
REFUND -- NO QUESTIONS ASKED.
The new special report, Motley Fool Fight Night! 5 Stock Rivalries Shaping the Future... The bundle of 3 exclusive investment reports... plus all the content you can access on the Stock Advisor members-only website: all the reports... all the recommendations from the past issues... all the articles full of proven investing lessons -- ALL YOURS TO
KEEP, WITH MY COMPLIMENTS. That's 4 reports -- valued at more than $186 -- FREE!
Of course, this kind of guarantee makes it possible to snap up everything we have to offer and pay nothing.
That's okay. That's how confident I am in what we have to offer you. So let's get started...
Please remember, this is a limited-time offer. I can only guarantee you a FREE copy of all 4 reports: Motley Fool
Fight Night! 5 Stock Rivalries Shaping the Future, and your 3 additional FREE REPORTS, plus your 75% discount to Stock Advisor -- if you join us right now AND if you join through this special invitation.
I urge you to start now, because there will never be a better or easier time to position yourself for explosive profits in the coming market rebound... and from a trusted source -- Motley Fool Stock Advisor!

http://www.fool.com/free-report/stock-advisor/apple-will-destroy-its…tmail.com&iid=42051843&repeatecap=n&vsaid=5478&src=isaeditxt0900025

Page 8 of 9

A Motley Fool Special Report

9/2/13 1:18 PM

All scorecard numbers as of July 31, 2013. All other figures as of March 26, 2013. The
Motley Fool owns shares of Apple and Microsoft.

http://www.fool.com/free-report/stock-advisor/apple-will-destroy-its…tmail.com&iid=42051843&repeatecap=n&vsaid=5478&src=isaeditxt0900025

Page 9 of 9

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Powerful Essays

    Apple is one of the most successful companies that is globally known, which has proving them to be the leaders in consumer technology. The company is over 30 years and is still very successful and has no signs of slowing down their success. Apple continues to surprise the world with new products year after year using top of the line technology. Apple has produced several products like the Apple I, Apple II, a Quick Take camera, the iMac, and the iPod those are just five of the amazing products the Apple has produced. Though very successful since 1976, they have had some issues with competitors but has overcome and passed them with annual revenues in the billion’s.…

    • 1398 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Rather than focus on the mainstream devices such as the ipad or imac, I'd like to take a look into the more historical products that marked the onset of Apple, as its original successes and failures are what paved the way to what it has become today.…

    • 704 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Apple Inc has been a computer company with ups and downs in its career. There innovative ideas have always been bold and fresh for a computer hardware/software company. In the 90’s Apple started a campaign to give the Apple a lead on Microsoft, however this idea did not have the outcome that was…

    • 734 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Better Essays

    Apple Inc. is one of the most well-known companies in the world. In 1976, Apple Inc. was created when Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak created and released the Apple I. It was a slow process for the company and the two were not taken seriously at first. It wasn’t until 1977 when Apple released the Apple II at a local computer trade show. Over the years, Apple Inc. grew in to one of the largest home based computer company. However, during the nineties the company suffered a downfall in their sales when the competition began to increase. Apple was well known for having the best personal computers…

    • 1357 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    EFAS of Apple Inc

    • 416 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Apple is always coming up with high technology and innovative products.It has invested huge amounts and resources in research and development. This has been the reason why the company is able to come up with very innovative products (46).…

    • 416 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Apple came back from near extinction to become one of the most revered technology companies in recent memory. They achieved this status by developing innovative design products and pushing the limits of their marketing prowess. Apple is known for their ability to listen to consumers and revolutionize market segments by providing modern design laden and feature rich alternatives to the target markets. They employ strategies that might contradict normal convention by keeping their prices high to build a brand image of prestige and promote their products through word of mouth. The impact on marketing is hugely noticeable by other companies following suit with store models resembling Apple stores.…

    • 798 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Steve Jobs and Apple

    • 773 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Thesis Statement: The Apple Corporation exceeds competing companies in product sales because of the company’s high recognition as a top selling brand, along with the dependability of its product and the technological innovations it consistently provides for consumers.…

    • 773 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    PSY/wk4

    • 1091 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Apple started out on April 1, 1976 with founders Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak. The first computer they released was the Apple I. It sold for $666.66 and they sold a total of 175 units out of the first 200 that they made. This was a huge step in the begging stages for Apple. Apple was soon to release newer more innovative computers over the years to come. Even the great Steve Jobs, was ousted by Apple in 1985 and it would be one of the biggest mistakes in Apples history. Although much success had come the company hit a rough patch in the 1990’s and did not come around until the return of Steve Jobs in 1996. This is when Apple really started to reinvent itself. Jobs came in and cleaned house, he introduced a whole new corporate philosophy that would change Apple forever. One of the most famous companies to ever reinvent itself is a company that many of us use products from every minute of the day. (Dressler, 2013)…

    • 1091 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    annotated bibliography

    • 2683 Words
    • 11 Pages

    Summarize: This article predominantly talks about how Apple is a major economy innovator. In the last 11 years, apple has come out with 3 products that have completely changed the market. The iPod, iPhone, and…

    • 2683 Words
    • 11 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Steve Jobs Speech

    • 855 Words
    • 4 Pages

    * "IPhone 5. The Biggest Thing to Happen to IPhone since IPhone." Apple. N.p., n.d. Web. 19 Oct. 2012. <http://www.apple.com/iphone/>.…

    • 855 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Apple's Impact On Society

    • 632 Words
    • 3 Pages

    This release started a trend that showed that Americans preffered bigger and better phones that combined cameras, mp3 players, phones, and much more. Many of the concepts that helped create the iPhone were concepts which were used in the Newton MessagePad which was an early handheld device also created by Apple. (Macworld) One of the reasons that the iPhone was so popular was how easy and simple it was to use. This phone changed the trend of small and sleek phones to large and high functioning handheld computers. Apple has continued the trend of larger and higher functioning handheld computers with the newest addition of the iPhone 6 Plus which is the largest iPhone on the market.…

    • 632 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Apple Inc. is constantly growing as a company as well as proven itself as innovated.…

    • 1284 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Apple Inc

    • 2086 Words
    • 9 Pages

    This success has come to Apple with its continued innovation by manufacturing and selling all kinds of consumer electronic devices. Early on Apple Company only sold computers. In 2001 it changed its name from Apple Company to Apple Inc. and expanded the size of its products. Today Apple Inc. has a full series of computers, phones, portable media players, software and more. This change shows the innovation that this company possesses in looking to the future and trying to curb what the consumers will buy.…

    • 2086 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Only once in a lifetime will a new invention come about to touch every aspect…

    • 2376 Words
    • 10 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Apple

    • 1063 Words
    • 5 Pages

    In short, for Apple, brands are more important than products. Products have limited life cycles, but brands -- if managed well -- last forever.…

    • 1063 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays

Related Topics