What does the iPad have in common with Harry Potter? Quite a lot it turns out.
It's got legions of fans eager to line up for it, lose sleep over it,
and even skip work to be the first to get their hands on it. And of
course there are those that detest it entirely.
We're not going to call CEO Tim Cook a wizard, say there will be an
eight-part movie series, or focus on the company's use of the word
"magic" to draw this comparison out even further. But we will say that
few products have brought this kind of appeal, and fewer still have done
it more than once.
Yet with the third (and assuredly not final)
iPad, Apple's managed to do it again. yesterday's launch, which brought lines at Apple's stores and third-party retailers around the world, is an affirmation of that.
What's Apple's secret for turning these launches into a cultural
event? It's consistency, and it's surprise. You believe that Apple product you're about to buy will be like the last one, but how will it
be better?
The people who line up know what to expect. Heck, many of them will
sell what they buy less than a year from now (just look at some of the
numbers trade-in services posted last week).
The thought may make an Apple hater retch, but you can't get past it: The iPad or the
iPhone
is what "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" was in the '60s, what
"Star Wars" was in the '70s, and Harry Potter books were during the late
'90s and into the '00s: A measure of our relevance to the times. Not
buying one or buying a competitor's is a statement: You're not a Beatles
fan, you're a Stones fan. You don't like Apple, but you dig
Android or Windows.
Late Apple co-founder Steve Jobs, the devout Beatles fan, would
either chuckle or cringe at the analogy. But how else do you explain
people lining up for the third generation of a product? How do you
explain young women shrieking so loud at Shea Stadium that people
mistook them for low-flying aircraft? The two are not so different.
It started with the iPod and continued through to the iPad: Apple
leaped from the tech product cycle and into the cultural landscape, and
it's done a remarkable job at staying there.
With that said, there remains the question of when these line-filled
launches will peak or hit an end entirely. Using the iPod as a
precedent--a product that never caused lines, but boosted Apple's bottom
line and gave it a foothold into the consumer consciousness--it's clear
that what's hot now can be less hot later. Though in that case, the
product's core coolness became part of what made these newer devices
something people could instantly latch onto and covet.
These smaller gadgets also lend themselves well to shared
experiences. Like gamers lining up to get the latest Call of Duty, or
just about any major title at video game stores, the end product may be
solitary in its nature, but there's a deep camaraderie about being among
the first to get it, as silly as that may seem to those that are not a
part of the pack.
When looking ahead to whether Apple can make this formula work for
yet another product, one can't go without mentioning TVs, which are strongly rumored
to be the company's next big thing. If Cook and company can manage to
get legions of buyers to queue up for a TV set that's not a Wal-Mart
door buster on Black Friday, it might really be time to start tossing
around that wizard title.
http://news.cnet.com
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