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WHAT I'M READING NOW

  • Professor Richard E. Foglesong: Married to the Mouse: Walt Disney World and Orlando

    Professor Richard E. Foglesong: Married to the Mouse: Walt Disney World and Orlando
    This is the first book that I am reading via the Kindle reader on my iPod touch. Great book that shows how Disney maneuvered its way into establishing Disney World as it's own pseudo government, free from the oversight and controls of traditional city, county and state control. Hardly, a slam piece, it shows how centralized planning can lead to a better, more fully conceived product (think: Apple), but also shows the pitfalls for eager cities and states willing to agree to any and all pre-conditions to secure major corporate patronage.

  • Robert B. Cialdini: Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion (Collins Business Essentials)

    Robert B. Cialdini: Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion (Collins Business Essentials)
    One of my recurring interests is better understanding how to influence the actions of others. This book looks at the psychology and underlying trigger mechanisms, such as reciprocity, that drive people to act in the way that you want them to. Relevant to people in sales, marketers and pretty much anyone who wants to turn the gravity of persuasion to their advantage.

  • George Friedman: The Next 100 Years: A Forecast for the 21st Century

    George Friedman: The Next 100 Years: A Forecast for the 21st Century
    Provocative, enjoyable, compelling read that makes the somewhat counter-intuitive argument that the next 100 years is destined to be the American Age (US), replacing the European Age, which has been the locus of gravity for the past 500+ years, and that our emerging counter-challengers will be Turkey, Mexico, Japan and Poland - not China or India.

  • Jessica Livingston: Founders at Work: Stories of Startups' Early Days

    Jessica Livingston: Founders at Work: Stories of Startups' Early Days
    Not since I read Accidental Empires many years ago have I had so much joy and insight reading about the AHA moments, the blood, sweat and tears, the mistakes, the victories and the lessons learned in the birthing of tech startups like Apple, Lotus, Hotmail and a couple dozen other seminal companies. If you are an entrepreneur or want to know what being one feels like, this is a must read.

  • Ian Williams: Rum: A Social and Sociable History of the Real Spirit of 1776

    Ian Williams: Rum: A Social and Sociable History of the Real Spirit of 1776
    The history of rum, with the exotic spirit as a key character in the founding of the United States. Next book in my Chatopic group, and a fun read so far.

  • Pip Coburn: The Change Function: Why Some Technologies Take Off and Others Crash and Burn

    Pip Coburn: The Change Function: Why Some Technologies Take Off and Others Crash and Burn
    I have been ruminating a lot about the relationship between user experience and user adoption. Coburn is one of my favorite writers/analysts from back in the days of Red Herring, and this book focuses on the user experience/user-centered approach to solutions thinking. Personally, Inmates are Running the Asylum is a better book.

  • Lynn H. Nicholas: The Rape of Europa: The Fate of Europe's Treasures in the Third Reich and the Second World War

    Lynn H. Nicholas: The Rape of Europa: The Fate of Europe's Treasures in the Third Reich and the Second World War
    I actually just saw the DVD and blogged about it. Brilliant and compelling. Captures the shocking scale and systematic way that the Nazis sought to plunder the world's great art as part of their plan on world domination and re-making humanity, art and culture. Wow!

  • Alan Moore: Watchmen

    Alan Moore: Watchmen
    Just finished this graphic novel, written by same author of V for Vendetta, one of my favorite all time movies. Watchmen is being released as a major motion picture early 2009, and this novel is a classic to many, but to me it fell a bit short of the promised target. Why? Characters interesting but not compelling, story arcs came together in a bit uninspired fashion, and left with a bit of a EH sensation.

  • Chogyam Trungpa: Crazy Wisdom (Dharma ocean series)

    Chogyam Trungpa: Crazy Wisdom (Dharma ocean series)
    For serious Buddhist devotees, Trungpa is the late great master; a real gift. This series of books is derived from seminars he led, so beauty is that you get Trungpa's synopsis, then Q&A from audience and then of course your own interpretation; a great way to triangulate on complex topics. This is my second time reading, as this is a time for Crazy Wisdom (search for my post on the topic).

  • Barton Gellman: Angler: The Cheney Vice Presidency

    Barton Gellman: Angler: The Cheney Vice Presidency
    This is a classic, IMHO. Really gives a good sense of how government works and how Cheney drove executive branch to reclaim lost power (of that branch). Cheney's depth of detailed knowledge on everything - policy, law, protocol, people and process is pretty impressive. Raises all sorts of questions on the delineation between him and Bush, and how that defines culpability. Total behind the scenes on key events, not partisan or editorializing but very strong analysis and excellent narrative from many of the key players.

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Holy Shit! Apple’s Halo Effect

Applehalo
Churning through the analysis of Apple’s earnings call yesterday, there was one bit of data that evoked a “Holy Shit!” moment. 

The data pertained to year-over year Mac sales, and the fact that they are up 51% this year compared to last - a rate of growth that is 3.5X better than the PC industry. 

Think about that one for a moment, and what it means to Apple’s execution of their strategy. 

On the one hand, it is tempting to caveat this data by noting that Apple is growing from a relatively tiny base of the PC market (they have a six percent market share). 

But, the fundamental truth of the matter is that growth is growth, and the bigger the ripple, the bigger the wake. 

Even more, when that ripple is GOOD GROWTH (i.e., high margins, product differentiation, customer lock-in/leverage via multi product buys, Apple's penetration into real and virtual sales channels), look out as true ‘halo effects’ start to play out that are self-affirming (i.e., success in one area feeds success in another).

In other words, the more the Mac business grows, the more gravity becomes Apple’s friend in mobile, media, online services and the like.  And vice-versa (growth in those areas drives people to buy Macs). 

This got me thinking about the fundamental TREND BETS that Apple made and has executed on.  Why?  When you can get in front of the right trends and actually execute, gravity has a strange way of becoming your friend. 

I would summarize these trend bets as follows:

  1. Make mobile Internet caveat-free. EXPLANATION: Before iPhone, mobile Internet was the proverbial dog walking on its hind legs.  Impressive that it could be done at all but not compelling.  No more.
  2. Rich media is the ‘MY STUFF’ bucket that mattersEXPLANATION: What we personalize, choose to listen to, watch, save or digitize is what we keep.  As a result of this fact, iPod (and now iPhone) have established a hard to emulate position as part of our online DNA, and this can be grown into all sorts of interesting product directions.
  3. Everything is a platformEXPLANATION: Having specific methods for extending and integrating your offerings, as well as providing tools that enable an ecosystem to coalesce around your platform trains customers that investments today will be rewarded in spades over time, creating customer loyalty and enabling high margins.  This used to be Microsoft 101 (before they started chasing Yahoo’ish windmills to Vistas unknown), but now it's Apple’s domain (read: iPod and the music industry; iPhone and mobile carriers; and soon, iPhone SDK).
  4. Everything is integrated from device to PC to online serviceEXPLANATION:  When you have the ability to look at an application as the optimal composite of what a general-purpose PC does well, combined with what a highly specialized iPod/iPhone/Apple TV does well and can weave in the dynamism of online services, you can operate in three dimensions, which is a beautiful thing.  When you are adept at things like workflow and usability, as Apple is, it is breathtaking; a game-changer.
  5. Everything is derivativeEXPLANATION:  Understanding the different “jobs” that customers hire your products for and segmenting your offerings accordingly enables you to provide optimized solutions while maximizing leverage.  This, in turn, enables domination of specific segments while delivering the economy of scale needed to build high margins.  The latest wrinkle to this is that Apple is starting to get good at taking innovations from one product (e.g., Multi-Touch on iPhone) and baking it into others (Multi-Touch on MacBook Air).  Cross-pollination in an innovative company like Apple bears all sorts of unanticipated fruits.

Now if only Apple can figure out how to get in front of the social media/social networking trend, my Facebook page might start to hyperventilate.  :-)

Related Links (from my blog):

  1. iPhone SDK: Mobile reasons for optimism
  2. The Chess Masters: Apple versus Google
  3. Comparing Microsoft's challenges to the fall of Communism

Related Links (other sites):

  1. Gone Indie: an excellent post by an ex Apple engineer both affirming what makes Apple great and why it was time to leave.  Also, supports my comment on Apple being slow on social networking uptake.  His post was written some time back so not suggesting our comments influenced one another just connecting dots from an Apple insider to an Apple outsider (me).
  2. Valleywag: On BusinessWeek story indicating that out of 250 surveyed companies, 87 percent report owning Apple computers. That's up from 48 percent in 2006.

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Comments

Mark, your writings are always SO insightful. Your observations (on many diverse fronts) are extremely novel, fresh, and keen.

For one small example, you are one of the few observers I have seen who has picked up on the game-changing potential of one of Apple's more unheralded, under-publicized products (in the financial and gadget-analysts' press), the iPod Touch. Part of the under appreciated-genius of the Touch is its form factor being POCKET-SIZED yet having a relatively generously-sized screen (like when it's tilted sideways for easy document reading), for an ultra-portable device. (The screen shouldn't be smaller nor should it be bigger, for portability sake.) I think that once WiFi enabled campus users and office users (who are prohibited from checking their personal email or conveniently checking their online news updates on their company computers) find that they can easily port their own personal net device (hidden in their pocket), and they start showing (off) all their co-workers and peers how easy and convenient this device truly is, it may well become an indispensable gadget, if not "near-essential, tool-of-convenience". Also, when places like Starbucks roll out their universal, essentially free WiFi services, many of their patrons can easily leave their lap tops at home and just carry their new iPod, when all they want to do is surf the net, play with email, or check their social services.

Mark, thank you so much for your fine articles.

Thanks for the kind note, Jared. Like you, I am waiting for more ubiquitous free WiFi along lines of Starbucks rollout with AT&T.

That starts to make the iPod touch more of a true mobile device versus what it is today for me: a great untethered device for home/office.

My only question wrt Apple marketing of iPhone/touch is they are usually very good at segmentation and clear messaging, yet every time I talk about the platform and misnamed iPhone SDK, I have to arm wave iPhone/iPod touch, which is a mouthful.

Hopefully, at WWDC they will re-brand as iMobile SDK or something like that.

Cheers,

Mark

Nice bog you have here. I pretty much lurk the internet when I'm bored and read all I can about the organic lifestyle, but I really liked you view on things. I'll bookmark the site and subscribe to the feed!

happy ending

Apple have made a damn good stategy at the moment, and there is talk of a new iPhone coming out in the summer aswell, so looks like they are going to make some more money! Good on them, their desgin has been the innovation needed in the technologies industry and long may it continue!

Very interesting article. Thanks for putting it

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