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Trying to Be Like Apple Can Harm Your Business

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Bolaji Ojo
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Re: Learn from Apple, don't attempt to BE Apple
Bolaji Ojo   9/26/2012 8:52:32 PM
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Ford, I wonder what a company should do if it can't be No. 1 or even No. 2. This scenario is playing out in the mobile phone market. Perhaps it will take time for the winnowing to sort out the survivors (as in the PC market) but the best marketers learn not just how to win but also how to be truthful about their chances when they have a losing hand.

prabhakar_deosthali
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Supply Network Guru
Re:
prabhakar_deosthali   9/26/2012 6:26:02 AM
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If I were a CEO of today one simple lesson I would learn from Apple is the conviction that your product is going to surpass all the competition in terms of its innovative features, quality , robustness and aesthetics.

I have seen a couple of examples of such conviction in my country where , a company looked like it was doomed , when it introduced its first indigenous car, survived and won the hearts of the consumers just because of the conviction of its CEO that he had made the right product for the right market.

mfbertozzi
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Supply Network Guru
Re: Learn from Apple, don't attempt to BE Apple
mfbertozzi   9/26/2012 4:12:13 AM
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Exactly Ford, I agree with you, definitely; I have only one topic to point out: who is / are in charge for managing the company. We could absolutely discuss about market's strategy or how to move on for increasing sales, but (speaking for myself) executives need to play their key role in defining them - being responsible for them, avoiding any responsibilities' scrolling out, since the beginning, instead of trying to simulate others.

_hm
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Supply Network Guru
Re: Prime requirement
_hm   9/25/2012 6:55:44 PM
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Other way of looking at this is the first 10 years of Apple, not the last 15 years. If one can put effort similar to one Apple did in its first ten years, it is good effort.

 

_hm
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Supply Network Guru
Re: Prime requirement
_hm   9/25/2012 6:55:44 PM
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Other way of looking at this is the first 10 years of Apple, not the last 15 years. If one can put effort similar to one Apple did in its first ten years, it is good effort.

 

Clairvoyant
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Supply Network Guru
Re: Nothing to copy
Clairvoyant   9/25/2012 6:25:02 PM
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I agree, Nemos. A large reason that Apple has been sucessful is that they have created products that have really caught on with consumers.

Nemos
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Nothing to copy
Nemos   9/25/2012 6:21:16 PM
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"Why shouldn't other enterprises strive to emulate such an exemplary company to similarly climb to the top of their industry segments?" 

To be honest I don't think Apple has a secret formula that should follow if you want to have a successful company. In every final product we have a unique Idea so even if you copy the idea doesn't mean that will lead you to the same successful product. 

 

Ford Kanzler
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Learn from Apple, don't attempt to BE Apple
Ford Kanzler   9/25/2012 5:31:51 PM
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Lots of great responses and the points about understanding what strategies worked (or didn't) for Apple are certainly useful for brands in any market sector. HAVING a clearly differentiated strategy or a direction which eventually creates that, would be a major breakthrough for many companies in and out of tech.

"Being like" is perhaps the first and biggest mistake many marketers make. Someone looks at a company and says, "Hey, we can make money doing the same thing." Me too isn't typically a great strategy. Apple hooked itself to trends not to what other companies were doing. Jobs was outspoken about not listening to customers for product innovations and figuring out paths not taken or even seen by others. Their slogan: "Think Different" wasn't just about Apple products.

Citing Marketing gurus Trout & Ries in their "22 Immutable Laws of Marketing," laws number 7, 8 and 9:

7. The strategy to use depends on what rung you occupy on the (category) ladder

8. In the long run, every market becomes a two-horse race

9. If you are shooting for second place (a follower), your strategy is determined by the leader.

 

mfbertozzi
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Supply Network Guru
Re: Prime requirement - newcomers
mfbertozzi   9/25/2012 5:05:24 PM
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@Bolaji: there are hundreds of CEOs right now trying to learn the "Apple Way"

it should be one of the reasons related to market's crisis; each one of us needs to learn, but the real key is on the value and ideas that we are able to bring, not to copy; maybe a new generation of CEOs is needed...

mfbertozzi
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Supply Network Guru
Re: Prime requirement - newcomers
mfbertozzi   9/25/2012 4:59:57 PM
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@nimantha.d: it's the right approach in my opinion; if you aim to copy by learning, it make sense, a lot, but at the end, you need absolutely to put on top your value- added, if you want to become a real competitor / player in the market.

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