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Trying to Be Like Apple Can Harm Your Business

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Ford Kanzler
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Re: Learn from Apple, don't attempt to BE Apple
Ford Kanzler   10/31/2012 10:20:10 PM
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Bolaji - There's two questions in your comment. If a company can't be #1 or 2 in a market, Jack Welch, a rather estute businessman who drove General Electric to greatness, would say, "Get out." Alternatively, develop a new business plan that will lead you to a new market where you CAN lead. See Law #2 in Trout & Ries' 22 Immutable Laws of Marketing

The second question seems to be about being straigntforward (new buzzword in play: "transparent") that your business is tanking and you're taking a new approach. That requires management to admit mistakes. (Not something our culture is real great at.) However, having a plan for what's next and how you can win against competitiors is a great business story that people will want to hear about. Guess the answer is whether the management team has thought through their new game plan and also has the guts to admit errors. "We didn't exactly nail this market but here's how we're coming back and going to become successful." (Plan B)

As likely you know, the history of Silicon Valley is full of great business people who have failed and failed again and then gone on and done great things. The unique value of the Valley's business ethic is that prior failures aren't held against business people. Typically, everone has been with a company that faiedl. Then we move on to the next gig...a lot wiser!

Bolaji Ojo
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Re: Learn from Apple, don't attempt to BE Apple
Bolaji Ojo   10/31/2012 6:13:55 PM
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You wish! Some people have said Apple has created a new dynamism in consumer electronics and that its future is guaranteed. That's a fantasy. In time, even today's most modern and desired products lose their shine. The idea that future generations will be as hooked on Apple as today's befuddled generation runs counter to history. Believe me, something better than Apple is getting cooked up.

Mr. Roques
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Re: Learn from Apple, don't attempt to BE Apple
Mr. Roques   10/31/2012 5:37:26 PM
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Are cult-base behavior past from father to son? Will Apple become so mainstream that kids will need a "Apple in the 80s/90s" effect and go for a new brand?

After a cult is built, they only need to deliver good products or how is it maintained?

Mr. Roques
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Re: Learn from Apple, don't attempt to BE Apple
Mr. Roques   10/25/2012 3:29:08 PM
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True, true! Well, what is obvious is that if you create a really good product, people will go buy it - not minding the premium.

Bolaji Ojo
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Re: Learn from Apple, don't attempt to BE Apple
Bolaji Ojo   9/28/2012 7:01:19 PM
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"How do you create a cult-like customer?" I think if we all knew the answer we would be duplicating Apple's fanatical following.

nimantha.d
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Production Synthesizer
Re: Learn from Apple, don't attempt to BE Apple
nimantha.d   9/28/2012 6:01:24 AM
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Well IMO, I feel that copying things will not work for anyone. Get the best out of Apple by studying them and then try to implement it to yours. If you try to copy their model will definitely not match with the business process of yours since they are different from each other.

Ford Kanzler
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Re: Learn from Apple, don't attempt to BE Apple
Ford Kanzler   9/27/2012 11:19:26 AM
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Apple started long ago creating a faithful customer base. The range of compatibility problems faced by PR users certanly helped Apple. They ceded schools with their products and created brand familiarity and preference among young users. As a market share underdog with obvious, positive differences, many people adopted the brand in contrast to mainstream but look-alike PCs. Recall the 1984 Big Brother ad? The preference for a valuable difference, which might be defined as elegant simplicity, as well as industry-leading technologies, has been consistently built on. That's how a cult-like customer base is built. It doesn't occur overnight.

Mr. Roques
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Stock Keeper
Re: Learn from Apple, don't attempt to BE Apple
Mr. Roques   9/27/2012 10:48:22 AM
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Well, Apple has a few best-practices but it also helps to prove some marketing principles wrong and make them re-write them.

How do you create a cult-like customer? Where does it start? luck? trying to be very exclusive?

Ford Kanzler
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Re: Learn from Apple, don't attempt to BE Apple
Ford Kanzler   9/26/2012 10:13:06 PM
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Bolaji - The answer is create a niche or market where you can become #1. Perhaps you've heard about "Blue Ocean Stategy." That's complex but many companies have zigged when others zagged and found a place where they can become dominant.

 

Bolaji Ojo
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Re:
Bolaji Ojo   9/26/2012 8:55:47 PM
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Prabhakar, How do you create such a product that is so compelling it leaves competitors in the dust and how do you ensure it is well marketed? What Apple has done is bring everything together and created not just an ecosystem that brings out the best products and the best marketing.

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