Apple Inc.: Still Taking A Bite Out of The Competition?: Go To Library Tab in Connect To Access Case Financials
Apple Inc.: Still Taking A Bite Out of The Competition?: Go To Library Tab in Connect To Access Case Financials
The year 2015 was not the first time Apple had wowed investors. In September 2012
Apple stock had hit a price high of $702.10, at that time making Apple the most
valuable company in the world, but the company had not been able to sustain that
lofty valuation. September 2012 had also marked Tim Cook's first full year as CEO
and the first full year since the death of Apple's visionary founder, Steve Jobs.
Although most Apple watchers had mourned Steve Jobs's death on October 5, 2011,
most also realized that Jobs's appointed successor, Tim Cook, came to the position
as CEO with an impressive track record. Cook had continued to grow the company,
and the 2012 year-end numbers showed continued financial success across almost
all product lines. However, expectations were still very high, and rumors of a
reduction in Asian supplier component orders for the iPhone for 2013 led investors to
worry about a drop-off in demand for the company's flagship product. This worry led
to a subsequent drop in Apple's stock price of nearly 24 percent. 3
CEO Cook subsequently defused concerns over supply chain issues, but that didn't
stop analysts and media watchers from wondering whether Apple had lost its
luster.4 This posed yet again the unavoidable question that had loomed large over
the then 35-year-old Apple: What happens to a modern company whose innovations
and inspirations are so closely tied to the vision of one leader when that leader's
influence is no longer present?5 By 2015, that question appeared to have been
definitively answered: Apple, under CEO Cook, was not only the most valuable
company in the world but was poised to grow even more (see Exhibits 1 and 2).
1976 Apple I Steve Jobs, Steve Wozniak, and Ronald Wayne found Apple Computer.
1979 Apple II1 Apple employs 250 people; the first personal computer spreadsheet
software, VisiCalc, is written by Dan Bricklin on an Apple II.
1980 Apple III Apple goes public with 4.6 million shares; IBM personal computer
announced.
1984 Mac 128K, Apple IIc Super Bowl ad introduces the Mac desktop computer.
1991 PowerBook 100, System 7 operating-system upgrade released, the first Mac OS to support
System 7 PowerPC-based computers.
1993 Newton Message Pad Sculley resigns; Spindler becomes CEO; PowerBook sales reach 1
(one of the first million units.
PDAs)
1996 Spindler is out; Amelio becomes CEO; Apple acquires NeXT Software,
with Jobs as adviser.
1997 Amelio is out; Jobs returns as interim CEO; online retail Apple Store
opened.
1998 iMac iMac colorful design introduced, including USB interface; Newton
scrapped.
1999 iMovie, Final Cut iBook (part of PowerBook line) becomes best-selling retail notebook in
Pro (video editing October; Apple has 11% share of notebook market.
software)
2005 iPod Nano, iPod First video iPod released; video downloads available from iTunes.
Shuffle, Mac Mini
2006 MacBook Pro Apple computers use Intel's Core Duo CPU and can run Windows
software; iWork software competes with Microsoft Office.
2007 iPhone, Apple TV, Apple Computer changes name to Apple Inc.; Microsoft Vista released.
iPod Touch
2008 iPhone 3G, MacBook App Store launched for third-party applications for iPhone and iPod
Air, App Store Touch and brings in $1million in one day.
2009 17-inch MacBook iTunes Plus provides DRM-free music, with variable pricing; Jobs takes
Pro, iLife, iWork '09 medical leave.
2010 iPad, iPhone 4, Mac iPhone 4 provides FaceTime feature; iTunes reaches 10 billion songs
App Store sold.
2011 iPad2, iPhone 4S, iPhone available on Verizon Wireless; Jobs resigns as CEO, dies on
iCloud October 5th. Tim Cook becomes CEO.
2012 iBook Author, iBook supports textbook creation on iPad. Apple becomes world's most
iPhone5, iPad Mini valuable company (market cap). Mac Retina displays and skinny Macs
introduced.
2014 iPhone 6 Plus, Apple Biggest iPhone yet; Apple Watch—computer on your wrist— introduced
Watch, Apple Pay in 2014, actual delivery in 2015; Apple Pay mobile payment service;
acquisition of Beats Electronic for streaming digital content.
Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_Apple_Inc._products .
Although most of those innovations occurred after 1998, when Apple was under
Steve Jobs's leadership, there was a 12-year period in which Jobs was not in charge.
The company's ongoing stated strategy had been to leverage “its unique ability to
design and develop its own operations systems, hardware, application software, and
services to provide its customers new products and solutions with superior ease-of-
use, seamless integration and innovative industrial design.”8 This strategy required
not only product design and marketing expertise but also scrupulous attention to
operational details. Given Apple's global growth in multiple product categories, and
the associated complexity in strategic execution, would CEO Tim Cook be able to
sustain the level of innovation the company had been known for? In the coming
years, would Apple still be able to take a bite out of all competition?
Company Background
In 1983 Wozniak left the firm, and Jobs hired John Sculley away from PepsiCo to
take the role of CEO at Apple, citing the need for someone to spearhead marketing
and operations while Jobs worked on technology. The result of Jobs's creative focus
on personal computing was the Macintosh. Introduced in 1984 through the now-
famous Super Bowl television ad based on George Orwell's novel Nineteen Eighty-
Four,9 the Macintosh was a breakthrough in terms of elegant design and ease of use.
Its ability to handle large graphic files quickly made it a favorite with graphic
designers, but its performance was slow and available compatible software was
limited. That meant the product as designed at the time was unable to significantly
help Apple's failing bottom line. In addition, Jobs had given Bill Gates at Microsoft
some Macintosh prototypes to use to develop software, and in 1985 Microsoft
subsequently came out with the Windows operating system, a version of GUI for use
on IBM PCs.
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Steve Jobs's famous volatility led to his resignation from Apple in 1985. Jobs then
founded NeXT Computer. The NeXT Cube computer proved too costly for the
business to become commercially profitable, but its technological contributions
could not be ignored. In 1997 Apple CEO Gilbert Amelio bought out NeXT, hoping to
use its Rhapsody, a version of the NeXTStep operating system, to jump-start the Mac
OS development, and Jobs was brought back as a part-time adviser.
In late October 2001, Apple released its first major noncomputer product, the iPod.
This device was an MP3 music player that packed up to 1,000 CD-quality songs into
an ultraportable, 6.5-ounce design: “With iPod, Apple has invented a whole new
category of digital music player that lets you put your entire music collection in your
pocket and listen to it wherever you go,” said Steve Jobs. “With iPod, listening to
music will never be the same again.”11 This prediction became even truer in 2002,
when Apple introduced an iPod that would download from Windows—its first product
that didn't require a Macintosh computer and thus opened up the Apple “magic” to
everyone. In 2003 all iPod products were sold with a Windows version of iTunes,
making it even easier to use the device regardless of computer platform.
In April 2003, Apple opened the online iTunes Music Store to everyone. This
software, downloadable on any computer platform, sold individual songs through the
iTunes application for 99 cents each. When announced, the iTunes Music Store
already had the backing of five major record labels and a catalog of 200,000 songs.
Later that year, the iTunes Music Store was selling roughly 500,000 songs a day. In
2003 the iPod was the only portable digital player that could play music purchased
from iTunes, and this intended exclusivity helped both products become dominant.
After 30 years of carving a niche for itself as the premier provider of technology
solutions for graphic artists, web designers, and educators, Apple appeared to be
reinventing itself as a digital entertainment company, moving beyond the personal
computer industry. The announcement in 2007 of the iPhone, a product
incorporating a wireless phone, a music and video player, and a mobile Internet
browsing device, meant Apple was also competing in the cell phone/smartphone
industry.
In 2010 Apple launched the large-screen touch-based tablet called the iPad and sold
over 2 million of these devices in the first two months. 12That same year, Apple's
stock value increased to the extent that the company's market cap exceeded
Microsoft's, making it the biggest tech company in the world. 13 In 2011 Steve Jobs
made his last product launch appearance to introduce iCloud, an online storage and
syncing service. On October 4, 2011, Apple announced the iPhone 4S, which included
“Siri,” the “intelligent software assistant.” The next day, on October 5, came the
announcement that Steve Jobs had died.
Apple continued to innovate, however, and on September 21, 2012, Apple had its
biggest iPhone launch ever, with the iPhone 5. Over 2 million preorders for this larger
and more powerful phone pushed the delivery date back to late October. 14 Later in
the fall, Apple released the iPad Mini with a smaller screen. On September 19, 2012,
Apple stock reached $702.10, its highest level to date, which made Apple the most
valuable company in the world. The year 2013 saw the iPhone5C and the high-range
iPhone5S, which introduced the Touch ID fingerprint recognition system. The iPhone
6 and 6 Plus, with larger displays, faster processors, and support for mobile
payments, were released in September 2014 and allowed Apple to extend its already-
strong market position with a record-setting sales performance over the 2014
holiday season.15 The prototype of the Apple Watch was unveiled in 2014, with
production scheduled to begin in 2015. Also introduced in 2014 was Apple Pay, a
mobile payment system meant to augment all Apple mobile products. February 2015
saw Apple reach the highest market cap of any U.S.-traded company, indicating
investor support and confidence in the company's innovative output.
Apple had become a diversified digital entertainment corporation. All the way back
in 2005, analysts had believed Apple had “changed the rules of the game for three
industries—PCs, consumer electronics, and music … and appears to have nothing to
fear from major rivals.”16 On top of steady sales increases on its computers, the
iPod, and iTunes, the added categories of iPhone and iPad had shown substantial
growth. Apple had taken bites out of the competition on all fronts (see Exhibit 4).
However, by 2013, Samsung had outperformed Apple in worldwide smartphone
sales,17 and Google's Android had captured the largest market share of cell phone
operating systems. At the same time, both the Amazon Kindle Fire HD tablet and
Microsoft's Surface tablet were nipping at the iPad's heels. The year 2015 was
marked by competition in the wearable-tech space, and some were wondering if
Apple had gotten too big to be nimble. Could Apple continue to grow and, if so, in
what categories?
EXHIBIT 4 Apple's Product Lines and Major Competitors
Computers iMac, Mac Pro, Mac Mini, HP, Dell, Toshiba, Lenovo in the laptop; Acer and
MacBook, MacBook Pro, ASUS in the netbook form factor
MacBook Air
Portable iPod Shuffle, iPod Nano, iPod Samsung, SanDisk, Archos, Microsoft Zune
music/media Classic, iPod Touch
players
Software* Safari web browser, QuickTime, Microsoft IE, Mozilla Firefox, Google Chrome,
iCloud Windows Media Player, RealNetworks, Dropbox,
Google Drive
Tablet computers iPad Samsung Galaxy Tab, Amazon Kindle Fire, Google
Nexus, Windows Surface
Apple's Operations
Maintaining a competitive edge required more than innovative product design.
Operational execution was also important. For instance, while trying to market its
increasingly diverse product line, Apple believed that its own retail stores could
serve customers better than could third-party retailers. By the end of 2014, Apple
had 437 stores open, including 178 international locations, with average store
revenue of about $50.6 million, and had received trademark protection for its retail
stores' “distinctive design and layout.”18
Supply chain, product design, and manufacturing efficiencies were not the only
measures of potential competitive superiority. Apple had also historically paid
attention to research and development, increasing its R&D investment year after
year. In the first quarter of 2015, Apple spent $1.9 billion on R&D, an increase of 42
percent from the previous year. Among its current rivals, Apple's R&D investment
had previously been beaten only by Microsoft (number one), Google, Hewlett-
Packard, and Amazon.23
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As one of Steve Jobs's legacies, Apple had traditionally kept the specifics of its
research and development a closely guarded secret and fiercely protected its
innovative patents. A well-publicized series of lawsuits in 2012 highlighted rifts
between Apple and Samsung, both a rival and a supplier. Samsung smartphones had
captured more market share than Apple's iPhones in the beginning of 2012, and
Apple argued that Samsung had succeeded with both its phones and tablets only by
copying Apple's designs. Samsung replied by claiming that Apple had infringed on
Samsung's patents.24 U.S. intellectual property courts found in favor of Apple, but
Japanese courts found in favor of Samsung. The ongoing battle meant Apple needed
to look for other suppliers of chips and displays. In November 2014, supply chain
watchers pointed out that Apple still had a major challenge ahead finding reliable
suppliers for increasingly scarce components and that the continued reliance on
Foxconn as the sole manufacturer of the iPhone 6 Plus meant that any disruption
there could have major consequences for delivery. 25
Apple's worldwide Mac computer sales during the first quarter of 2015 increased 9
percent over the same quarter in the previous year. Although there had been fears
that sales of desktop computers, especially, would slow worldwide as the tablet and
smartphone markets grew, the introduction of the MacBook Air allowed Apple to
compete favorably even in the face of overall contraction. Apple computers had been
able to gain market share for 33 of the 34 quarters since 2007. Sales of Apple
computers worldwide during the third quarter of 2014 did see an increase over the
previous year, consistently outgrowing the market and allowing Apple to take over
the number-five slot from ASUS (Exhibit 5). According to market analysis done by
IDC, the Mac's domestic market share grew from 12.4 to 13 percent, putting the Mac
in third place overall in IDC's survey of PC vendor units shipped in the third quarter of
2014.27 This was up substantially from 2010, when Apple had only 7.4 percent of the
U.S. market.28
EXHIBIT 5 Worldwide PC Market Share, Third Quarter 2014 (units in
thousands)
3Q14 3Q14 Market Share 3Q13 3Q13 Market Share 3Q14–3Q13 Growth
Company Shipments (%) Shipments (%) (%)
Apple reported selling 6 million of the iPod MP3 players over the 2013 holiday
season, down from over 12 million iPod units during the previous season, and in the
2014 year-end report iPod sales were not singled out as a separate category. As with
desktop computer sales, the MP3 player market was contracting overall as
smartphone and tablet devices took over many music-related tasks. Even with the
decline in iPod sales, Apple was still leading well over its rivals. Traditionally, the
iPod had had a 70 percent share of the MP3 player market in the United States, and
it was the top-selling player in the world.30 Microsoft's entry into this space, the
Zune, was discontinued in October 2011. Its market share never exceeded 1
percent.31
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By 2015, smartphones had become the device of choice for most manufacturers.
Smartphones were also often the electronic data consumers' device of choice, with
multiple features, including cameras and the ability to surf the Internet while being
held in the hand, rather than taking up the space of a tablet or ultra-thin computer.
However, the smartphone market was increasingly turning into a battle between
mobile operating systems (OSs).
Apple's iPhone, running on iOS, had had considerable competition from Samsung's
Galaxy smartphones. This was partly due to Samsung's use of Google's Android
operating system. Historical worldwide leader Nokia had stumbled badly with its
outdated Symbian operating system and was trying to regain a foothold by partnering
with Microsoft, using the Windows Phone operating system. Although Research In
Motion (RIM) still had some long-term BlackBerry fans, RIM had had problems
updating its BlackBerry line of phones. The market share by operating-system map
was now worth watching, with Android devices expected to continue to capture the
majority of market share through 2016 (see Exhibit 7).33
EXHIBIT 7 Smartphone Operating-System Market Share, Third Quarter 2014
In recent years it appeared that some of the “cool” factor had disappeared from the
iPhone. In Asian markets, especially, Apple's shares of mobile devices had fallen
sharply, losing considerable ground to Samsung and HTC smartphones. Younger
users, the 20-something college students and recent graduates, were looking for the
next new thing, and that was increasingly an Android-driven device. A social media
expert in Singapore noted, “Apple is still viewed as a prestigious brand, but there are
just so many other cool smartphones out there now that the competition is just much
stiffer.” This was a problem, because, starting in 2012, this Asian market was also
where consumers were adopting very quickly.34 In addition, CEO Tim Cook's visit to
China in the fall of 2012, presumably to woo China Mobile's chief executive into
subsidizing the iPhone, hadn't had the expected result. China Mobile's wireless
network, the world's largest, wouldn't be adding the iPhone without better terms
from Apple. Instead, it offered its subscribers the Nokia Lumia Windows 8
phone.35 Given all these challenges, could Apple continue to ride the success of the
iPhone to greater profits? Many were skeptical.
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However, during 2014, Apple's new iPhone with its larger screen size, in the 6 and 6
Plus models, was able to capture the consumer's attention, allowing Apple to close
the gap with Samsung. This was especially notable in China, where Apple's refusal to
drop the price allowed it to achieve almost a luxury status with the growing middle
class in that country. Sales in China had grown substantially—achieving $38 billion in
2014, up from only $1 billion in 2009.36 Elsewhere in 2014, iPhone sales had grown
by 44 percent in the United States and were up more than 96 percent in Brazil,
Russia, India and China, but by 2015 the overall smartphone market was slowing
down as mature markets were increasingly dependent on replacement purchases
and emerging markets appeared more interested in low-cost devices.37
However, in 2015, Apple was poised to capture market share in two distinct areas:
among those consumers who had previously been “inhibited” by the smaller screen
size of older phones and therefore were unwilling to go completely mobile until the
iPhone 6/6 Plus appeared; and within the enterprise market, as corporate users
began to appreciate Apple's interactivity and the robustness of the iOS. Also,
although a “staggering” 1.06 billion Android-based smartphones were shipped in
2014, while the iOS market share declined slightly (until the fourth quarter, when the
iPhone 6 began shipping), according to data from industry watchers the difference in
operating profit per phone was equally staggering: Android OS profit per phone was
$2.26, while iOS phones yielded $97.50. In the Android/iOS war, “strangling” profits in
the quest for increased market share might not have been the best long-term
strategy. Apple had the resources to grow and win. 38
Considering that previous tablet computers had failed to catch on in the mass
market, Apple made a bold move by introducing the iPad. Upon its release, some
users criticized the iPad for a lack of features, such as a physical keyboard, a
webcam, USB ports, and Flash support, and for its inability to multitask, share files,
and print. However, features like the sleek design, touch screen, multiple apps, and
fast and easy-to-navigate software made the iPad popular in business, education,
and the entertainment industry. The iPad was selected by Time magazine as one of
the “50 Best Inventions of the Year 2010.” 40
Until September 2010, Apple iPads accounted for 95 percent of tablet computer
sales, according to research firm Strategy Analytics. 41 But by the end of 2012, that
figure had fallen to 78.9 percent. The loss of share was due to the arrival of new
tablet devices, such as Samsung's Galaxy, based on Google's open-source Android
system. Other platforms and devices had also begun to appear, including Google's
Nexus, Amazon's Kindle Fire HD, and Microsoft's Windows 8 Surface tablet. 42 By
2015, devices running the Android operating system had achieved a market share of
66 percent of new tablet shipments.43
In October 2014 Apple released the iPad Air 2, the fifth-generation iPad. With
similarities to the iPad Mini, the Air was thinner, with a smaller screen bezel, yet still
used the same 9.7-inch Retina Display as the previous iPad model. In addition to the
physical redesign, the Air had more powerful cameras and slightly increased
processing speed, but it was otherwise only a slight improvement over previous iPad
versions.44 Going into 2015 there were signs that the iPad models' sales, as well as
the entire tablet industry, were “going downhill,” partly due to the “jumbo” phones
coming from the likes of Samsung (and Apple) and the low-cost Google-based
Chromebook laptops (Exhibit 8).45
EXHIBIT 8 Worldwide Quarterly Tablet Market Share, Fourth Quarter 2014
Smartphone OS Market Share, Q4 2014 Market Share, Q4 2013 Year-Over-Year Growth
In this category, Microsoft's Surface Pro 3 was the only tablet that appeared to be
growing: 24 percent increase in sales, year over year, during the fourth quarter of
2014. This indicated that a performance-oriented tablet appealed to users. 46 Apple
needed to consider an upgrade.
In 2011 iCloud was introduced during one of Steve Jobs's last public appearances.
The web-based storage service initially struggled to get traction, but in 2014 it was
upgraded to iCloud Drive, allowing users to interoperate with Windows and connect
all iOS devices. As an alternative to Google Drive and Dropbox, iCloud Drive gave
Apple an intro into the enterprise/corporate user space, a market CEO Tim Cook had
begun to target.51
In other software development areas, Apple had not been that successful. In 2012
Apple stumbled badly with its Maps software. Released in iOS6, Apple Maps was
meant to replace Google Maps on the iPhone but instead produced distorted images
and gave very bad directions. CEO Tim Cook had to apologize that Apple had fallen
short of its commitment to making “world-class products,” and he suggested
customers go back to using its competitor's mapping software. 52
iTunes
Arguably, Apple's most innovative software product was iTunes, a free downloadable
software program for consumers that ran on either Mac or Windows operating
systems. It was bundled with all Mac computers and iPods and connected with the
iTunes Music Store, enabling purchases of digital music and movie files that could be
downloaded and played by iPods, iPads, and the iPhone and, on PCs, by iTunes.
Although the volume was there, iTunes had not necessarily been a profitable
venture. Traditionally, out of the 99 cents Apple charged for a song, about 65 cents
went to the music label; 25 cents went for distribution costs, including credit card
charges, servers, and bandwidth; and the balance went to marketing, promotion, and
the amortized cost of developing the iTunes software. 53 However, even if not wildly
profitable, iTunes was still considered a media giant, especially with over 43 million
DRM-free songs available in its database as of 2015.54
Several competitors had tried to compete with the iTunes service. RealNetworks'
Rhapsody subscription service, Yahoo MusicMatch, and AOL music downloads had
all competed for the remaining market share, using the potentially buggy Microsoft
Windows Media format, and all subsequently failed.55 Even though one commentator
said in 2004 that “ultimately someone will build a piece of software that matches
iTunes,”56as of 2015 the only serious competition was from Amazon.
At the start of 2013, iTunes accounted for over 60 percent of all digital music sales.
In second place was Amazon's MP3 store, with 16 percent market share. Google
Play, eMusic, Zune Music Pass, Rhapsody, and a few others each captured 5 percent
or less of the remaining sales. Growth, however, was occurring in the streaming
service market, especially with the rising popularity of online radio and Internet
streaming providers Pandora and Spotify, and by 2015 music sales on iTunes had
fallen by over 14 percent worldwide. This trend helped explain why Apple acquired
the monthly subscription streaming service Beats Music in 2014. The $3 billion
acquisition included headphone maker Beats Electronics. 57
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As of January 2015, over 75 billion apps had been downloaded from Apple's App
Store, but Google Play, the app store for Android users, was gaining ground,
indicating that Google might be attracting more top-tier developers and quality titles
to its marketplace. However, downloads for both platforms slowed in 2014, causing
market watchers to wonder if a plateau was coming. This might mean diminishing
returns and a less prosperous business model for all concerned.58
Apple Pay
Introduced in late 2014, Apple Pay allowed iPhone 6 and 6 Plus users in the U.S. to
make secure payments for goods and services using their phones. With over 1 million
credit and debit card activations within the first 72 hours of its release, Apple Pay
was intended to replace the user's wallet and, according to CEO Tim Cook, would
“forever change the way all of us buy things,” primarily because the process was
more secure than a traditional card-based transaction. As of 2015, major retailers
such as Macy's, Walgreens, McDonald's, Whole Foods, and Disney had all agreed to
accept Apple Pay. Apple reportedly received 0.15 percent of each purchase price,
making the service a potentially lucrative venture. Major competition was coming
from Google Wallet, especially given Google's 2015 acquisition of technology from
Softcard.59 Google Wallet had also seen an increase in usage as the Apple Pay
system was launched, indicating that 2015 might become an interesting year for
alternative types of transactions to occur.60
Rumors surfaced in 2015 that Apple had acquired resources, primarily engineers and
related technology, that would enable it to develop an automobile, ready for market
by 2020. Speculation was that Apple would not do the actual assembly but, as with
its other products, would use its sophisticated supply chain expertise to outsource
manufacturing, focusing its considerable innovation skills on the design and sale of a
product that incorporated Apple technology in multiple configurations. As one
observer said, “In this strategy, Apple's current products would act as building
blocks and core components of future, more important products. The ecosystem
would become much larger,” therefore enabling Apple to continue to grow and
dominate the innovation landscape.63
As Cook explained, in each of the markets Apple had entered, it was not the first to
market. It was not the first to produce MP3 players, smartphones, or tablets, and it
was not the first with wearable technology or a mobile pay system. Apple's strategy
had always been to carefully analyze each market and then design products that
were more attractive to users than any competitor's products could be.66 Under
Cook, Apple had transitioned itself “from being a hypergrowth company to being a
premium, branded consumer company.”67 Apple was becoming “a wildly profitable
company that continues to be a major (or dominant) player in various product
categories,”68 and those categories appeared to be expanding beyond consumer
electronics. Apple was becoming a truly vertically integrated designer and marketer
of products that increasingly inhabited a world “dominated by the Internet of
Things”—Apple just loved “designing great stuff,” and it could use its current
products as “building blocks and core components of future, more important
products.”69 Some of those future products might include enterprise software,
magnetic locks, automobiles, solar power systems, and anything else that could take
advantage of the Apple ecosystem. As one commentator said, “Tim Cook has a
dream. Apple Everywhere. Coming to a world near you. In time.”70Why not?