Being an apple geek, and having an iPad, iPod, iPhone and Macbook Pro – I love apple gadgets. I’ve noticed a few things apple does with marketing that in my option are done very well.
1) Apple does not change product names. With Dell – when they release new computers they continue to change tons of numbers and product names, when they are all desktop computers. Apple takes a more simple approach and creates a computer called “iMac” – not Optiplex 745, Optiplex 755, etc. Its always the “iMac.”
2) People have confidence in products that stay around. When Dell or HP play their part number and naming games, people feel that their computers are old and obsolete. Apple takes a different approach, all though they update the product lines frequently – the product names for the most part stay the same. It really gives people confidence that their Apple products are staying around.
3) Apple Charges a Premium. Yes, they do – but if you’ve ever used apple products they really feel like they are well built. I had a Macbook Pro and a old Toshiba Laptop, both of which I purchased at the same time. Three years after I purchased both, the Toshiba laptop was falling apart – while the unibody MacBook was holding up well. Feet weren’t falling off the bottom, the case was still in excellent shape – everything about it was great. The Toshiba laptop I had was plastic, and all falling apart, feet were missing, plastic was chipped, it was scuffed up. My mac all though it had few dents looked like a million bucks compared to that laptop. While I was proofreading this paragraph, I realizing it I referred to it as “old Toshiba” earlier in this post, but not my Macbook Pro as old.
4) Resale Value stays high. Like any computers the resale value drops a ton after its old – but macs retain their value much better. Not that it matters, but even 6 years after a mac was purchased new, you can still sell it on ebay for about 1/3 to 1/2 of new purchase price! That has a lot to say about it!
5) Macs just work. Like they made fun of PC’s in all those old commercials – macs really do just work. Even the most techie people prefer to be able to just use their computer without having weird errors or having to deal with problems. Macs (all though not problem-less) – have a lot more problems than PC’s. Whats even better is there is probably a mac store within driving distance where in many cases they will help you for free with fixing any issues you have. Apple really stands behind their products.
Apple has done a great job with Steve Jobs behind the helm. I can only hope that Apple computers stays innovative and continues to function as well without him!
So Microsoft thinks they can do QR Codes better with gettag.mobi, Its a pathedic ripoff of the QR model since you need their Microsoft App to scan it! Whats the point? So A&W and other places are printing these on their products, but yet everyone all ready has QR readers – and not the gettag.mobi readers..
Checked in our FourSquare today and found this a little weird, it said it was my second time checking in – but yet it gave me points as though it was my first time checking in. To me it seems foursquare is having problems with growth – since I’ve had a few problems in the last few weeks, but even with problems they have an awesome product.
HP’s website seems to be having issues with the touchpads. It said I had one in my cart but continued to get error after error after error. Checkout the HP website:
After seeing this, I finally did get half way through before it got errors – I had to call HP and they said I didn’t make it through… Apparently the demand is still HUGE for these.
I find it funny that when the HP Touchpad doesn’t sell, Everywhere discounts it to $99 to just get rid of them. Even walmart and Best Buy (Canada) are basically giving them away!
Within seconds these were cleared out of walmart.com, apparently the trick for these touchpads (ipads, HP, and anything else) is they need to price them at like $99 – first vendor to figure out a way to make a sub-$100 touchpad will probably make BILLIONS on it! Just use HP as the model…
QR codes are now appearing everywhere in the US! Now even on a ketchup bottle, the other day at lunch I noticed it… I think QR codes have really taken a place now in the US – I’ve seen at least 20 in the last week.
I think a lot of companies are using them the wrong way, I’m surprised I haven’t seen more opt-in and social campaigns in stores with Facebook, Twitter and email…









