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Apple and the iPhoneThe new old thing

2017-07-05 11:02:06

Apple is struggling to find another blockbuster product. The old one might do

APPLE has a new hit device, so popular that it has sold out across most of

America and Britain. If you order it online it takes six weeks to arrive. Best

Apple product in a long time, sings one online review. Useful and (of course)

slickly designed, it enjoys the highest consumer satisfaction of any Apple

product in history, according to a study by two firms, Creative Strategies and

Experian.

Such enthusiasm must be bittersweet for Apple s bosses. The gadget in question

is AirPods, a set of wireless headphones that look a lot like Apple s

traditional ear buds, just without a wire. Priced at $159, AirPods could become

a business worth billions of dollars, like the Apple Watch, a wearable device

that Apple started selling in 2015. But headphones are hardly the

transformative, vastly profitable innovation that many have been waiting for.

That wait started only a few years after its biggest blockbuster launched. On

June 29th 2007 the iPhone first went on sale. Since then Apple has sold some

1.2bn phones and notched up more than $740bn in sales from the bestselling tech

gadget in history (see chart). Two-thirds of Apple s $216bn in sales in 2016

came from the iPhone.

Atop a hill there is usually nowhere to go but down. Questions about the future

of the iPhone and whether Apple will ever design another product to match it

pursue the company. The relentless rise of smartphone ownership is slowing,

with around two-fifths of the global population now owning one. Apple is also

facing more competition, especially in China (its second most important market

after North America) where sales have been declining, lending weight to fears

that Apple is experiencing peak iPhone .

Even though Apple has been spending $10bn a year on research and development,

people aren t banking on innovation , says Amit Daryanani of RBC Capital

Markets, a bank. That helps to explain why the firm s shares are valued on a

price-to-earnings ratio of around ten times its forecast 2018 earnings

(stripping out cash), lower than the 12-14 times that the

information-technology industry trades on.

Certainly, Apple s attempts to diversify away from its hit product have been

flawed. One disappointment has been television, worth some $260bn globally.

ItsTV offering is a cable box that is little more than a portal to content from

other firms, such as Netflix, not the disruptive offering that Apple executives

promised.

There is also justified scepticism about another possible avenue for growth:

personal transportation, an industry that is worth some $10trn. In June, for

the first time, Tim Cook, Apple s chief executive, publicly discussed the firm

s ambition to develop an autonomous-car system. Apple could surely design a

sleek car, but the big shift is away from ownership toward transportation as a

service. Routing cars to specific places, as Uber does, is a leap.

Many people believe that Apple could expand in health care, on which people

spend an estimated $8trn each year globally. Today Apple allows people to store

their fitness information on their devices and offers a platform for developers

to create health and fitness apps. But it is as yet unclear what Apple s edge

will be. Its stance on consumers privacy, which it protects more assiduously

than other technology giants, may be an advantage. But dealing with a complex

web of companies and reams of red tape, as any foray into health care would

require, would again be a big departure from what it is used to.

Part of Apple s difficulty in finding the next big thing may be that it is

still steered by a small, insular group of executives who have mostly been at

the firm since the 1990s. They include Mr Cook, who took over shortly before

the death of Steve Jobs, the firm s adored founder, in 2011. Apple is not good

at hiring people from outside who could help bring new skills and ideas. Other

companies have a far better record of bringing outsiders into the fold. Amazon

s Prime video offering and the work that formed the basis for Echo, its home

speaker, drew on newcomers expertise.

Yet Apple will have every chance to adapt because of the enduring strength of

its hit product. The iPhone business will not grow as rapidly as in the past

but it will remain more important for far longer than people think, says Ben

Thompson of Stratechery, a research firm. The iPhone 8, due to be unveiled in

September, is likely to be innovative enough to encourage around 250m-300m

iPhone users to upgrade, driving a new supercycle of sales.

Katy Huberty of Morgan Stanley, a bank, goes as far as to say that for Apple

the next iPhone will be the iPhone. The inclusion of augmented reality (AR),

which superimposes digital information onto real-world images, for example, is

likely to drive strong future iPhone sales. Apple is likely to include a 3D

camera in the iPhone, and it recently said it would begin operating ARKit, a

platform for software developers to design new apps that integrate AR. This

step is akin to when Apple launched its app store in 2008. That set off a wave

of innovation in mobile apps, which in turn gave consumers more reasons to buy

iPhones. One early experiment is by the retailer IKEA, which is working on an

iPhone and iPad app that lets users point their phone and see what furniture

looks like superimposed in a particular space.

By encouraging app developers to start work on AR now, Apple will have a two-

or three-year head start on Google s Android operating system, says Tim Bajarin

of Creative Strategies. Google has launched an AR platform, called Tango, but

it is only available on two devices, the Lenovo Phab 2 Pro and the Asus Zenfone

AR, which have few users. If Apple can keep a lead on integrating AR into its

software, that would also give users a reason to keep on preferring the iPhone

over cheaper smartphones. This will be particularly helpful in China, where

local brands such as Vivo and OPPO have taken share last summer OPPO s R9

phone, which costs just $400, overtook the iPhone in the country.

Other revenue streams are tied in part to the iPhone s success. One area of

strong growth if the base of iPhone users continues to expand will be Apple s

services business, which includes revenue from app sales, cloud storage,

insurance of Apple devices and more. Services are already Apple s

second-largest business, having overtaken personal computers in 2016.

Spec for smart specs

Another promising new business is smart glasses, which Apple has begun

referencing in its patent applications. These will overlay digital information

onto the real world without the need to look down at a screen. Work that Apple

has done in developing AirPods, the Apple Watch and ARKit, such as

waterproofing and elongating battery life, are the building blocks for smart

glasses, says Benedict Evans of Andreessen Horowitz, a venture-capital firm.

Many reckon that glasses may render phones useless, but for a long while,

glasses will only work with the help of the computing power of a nearby

smartphone.

Yet it may be another question entirely its use of data that matters most to

Apple s next decade. Apple has made a point of distinguishing itself from firms

like Alphabet, Google s parent company, which mine user data to target ads

online. It has made a great effort to make ad blockers easy for users to

install, for example. But data are increasingly central to designing the

smartest software; Apple already risks lagging behind in areas such as voice

recognition and predictive software if it remains inflexible about hoovering up

consumers information. Whether to prioritise privacy ahead of innovation may

turn out to be Mr Cook s most important decision yet.