// Ideas // Culture // Trends // Marketing // Advertising // Commentary // Banter

Apple fervour as iPhone 4 hits the high street..

Posted: June 24th, 2010 | Author: Clip Bored | Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: , | No Comments »

I’m bitter-sweet when it comes to Apple. On the one hand I quite simply adore their products and genuinely feel my everyday life is better as a result of using them. On the other hand however, I have this constant guilty feeling that I am feeding a company massive profits, above and beyond what should be deemed acceptable.  With the semi-global release of iPhone 4 today, hoards of Apple fans are queuing outside stores eager to get their hands on the fourth generation handset and despite retail prices starting at a whopping £499, people really don’t seem to be put off by what many a grandparent would consider, “a massive waste of money”.

So just how much are Apple making from all of this? And how do the networks stand to benefit? The story might not be quite as clear as you think..

Original article found HERE

Last week, Apple overtook Microsoft as the world’s most valuable technology company. How has it managed to be so successful? Pundits love to say “innovation”, but if you go beyond the generic answer and break down the specific steps in Apple’s business model, an intriguing picture emerges.

For marketers, this long journey once again reinforces the ultimate advantages of building brand. Your consumers are numerous and price insensitive. Your profits are huge. Your differentiation is ensured. Your retailers are humbled and controlled. And your business, as Apple ably demonstrates, thrives.

Let’s take the iPhone, and follow the stream of money from its origin of an initial consumer purchase all the way to the ocean that represents Apple’s incredible profits.

Our journey begins with a consumer who heads into O2, Vodafone or another network provider to purchase a new iPhone 3GS. If Apple was any normal company it would now expect to give away up to 15% of its revenues in margin for the retailer. But Apple’s brand strength combined with the latent threat of its own retail stores means it usually sells its products to retailers for virtually the same price as they will charge their consumers. That’s right – zero profit for the retailer. Apple can do this because it is a destination brand that every retailer wants and one that often confers lucrative peripheral sales.

But, amazingly, it’s even better than that when Apple sells its iPhone through mobile phone operators. Apple sells them the iPhone for about £400 and then they discount it and sell it on to their consumer for £190 plus a two-year contract. The contract is crucial for the operators because they will not make a profit on their iPhone consumer until month 16 or 17 of their contract.

Mobile phone operators like Vodafone and O2, which pride themselves on their marketing competence and brand equity, actually blew their own markets years ago. By offering the same phones as their competitors and killing their differentiation with promotional tariffs, these operators rapidly and efficiently turned themselves into commodities. Now they are paying the price with deals on the iPhone that mean they take all the risks while Apple gets all the immediate revenues.

So Apple enjoys £400 of revenues from each iPhone its operators sell. Obviously this is not pure profit. There are components in every iPhone that Apple must purchase from its suppliers. Thanks to a series of “teardowns” by geeks we now know that the most expensive component in an iPhone is the flash memory card that Toshiba sells to Apple for £17. It’s downhill from there and the total combined cost of all the components in an iPhone comes to a miserly £124. Buying power and economies of scale mean that Apple retains, at this point, a whopping £276 after all the parts have been accounted for.

Of course, these components must then be assembled. If you own an iPhone, take it out and have a look at it. About three-quarters of the way down the back you will see two sentences in a tiny, almost illegible font: “Designed by Apple in California. Assembled in China”. The total cost of this Chinese assembly is about £4.50. Apple is able to keep manufacturing costs low because the majority of iPhones are assembled by Foxconn at its enormous Shenzhen production plant. Foxconn pays its workers £200 a week and expects them to work intensively for hours, with no interaction with others and often with many additional hours of overtime expected at the end of each day.

About £227 out of every £400 iPhone sold goes into Apple’s profits.

The result for Apple is that 1% of its retail price for the iPhone covers its complete manufacture. The implication for Foxconn’s employees is less advantageous; more than ten of its young workers have taken their own lives so far this year and the company is now at the centre of a global ethics scandal.

The remaining £275 is still not profit for Apple. We must also account for the company’s selling, general and administrative (SG&A) expenses – meaning all its additional salaries, advertising and other operational costs. We know from its annual report that Apple’s current SG&A is 12% of revenues. So for each iPhone sold, we must now subtract £48. And there, finally, the journey ends. About £227 out of every £400 iPhone sold goes into Apple’s profits and eventually on to its shareholders in the form of a dividend.

Low manufacturing costs combined with even lower consumer price sensitivity mean Apple enjoys gross margins of about 60%. To put that in perspective – it’s in a league of its own versus formerly dominant manufacturers like Nokia (33%) and Sony Ericsson (8%). It’s a profit that even challenges the nascent rise of China as an economic superpower. Unless the Chinese can build their own brands, they will be forever constrained to do the bidding of foreign companies and to continue the low margin manufacturing businesses that have, as yet, dominated their industrial operations.


Nike football laser show..

Posted: January 19th, 2010 | Author: Clip Bored | Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: , , | No Comments »

Rooney, Torres and some mean looking lasers in this new futuristic viral from Nike. There’s even an app for it:

Master Accuracy is a Nike Football+ Training app developed by Juve’s top coaches. This 4-week program combines video training drills with tips from manger, Ciro Ferrara, and Signature Moves from Fernando Torres plus lots more killer pro insights.Master a range of shooting and finishing skills then benchmark your accuracy in the Torres Challenge and post your scores to the global leaderboard to rank yourself against other players.Look out for other Nike Football+ Training apps – Master Control and Master Speed (coming in 2010). All designed to help you become the complete player, straight from the world’s best players and clubs.

I have to say I don’t know too much about football but it seems footballers are pitched way more techie, glamorous and god like than they used to be.


Your phone as part of the campaign..

Posted: October 29th, 2009 | Author: Clip Bored | Filed under: Ads, Interactive Advertising | Tags: , , , | 2 Comments »

This week has seen a couple of campaigns making use of people’s phones in order to engage an audience..

A few months ago Toyota released an iPhone app as part of a digital push to draw attention and educate people about the Prius. It allowed you to do a whole bunch of quirky things; a 360″ tour of the interior, the ability to play games, watch ads, draw pictures….. cute little things --  all in-sync with the green natured Hybrid category.

Picture 1

But  now Toyota have increased the scale a bit. If you have the app, you can now send pictures that you’ve drawn and get them uploaded onto a giant screen in Times Square for all to see. Watch the vid below for a better idea.

A lot of buzz will come out of this, however I can see it wearing out quickly. After all, how many scrappy drawings can you admire before it all becomes a bit samey? It’s also not going to be live in any sense -- I imagine there will be a HUGE cue of people wanting to get their images broadcasted. It would definitely be more interesting if they could do it so it was more instantaneous and perhaps involved people working together in some way..

Nevertheless, a novel approach from Toyota.

Source : Mashable

Next up is something from Axe Uruguay . Though less green…more blue.

In support of two new fragrances of deodorant spray (one for the day time, one for the night time) a cheeky little print campaign (Lowe Ginko) provides the creative synonym to the sell. The idea, is that after a certain time of the day, sending an SMS text to a designated number will result in you being sent the missing pieces of the picture on you mobile phone. See scantily clad woman below.

directdaily_AXE_sms

Although it feels a little confused to me (day time/night time fragrances = quite premium, mobile phone & voyeurism = not quite premium), it fits perfectly with Axe’s brand promise and the Nuts reading/Dixons employed demographic that tend to buy into this kind of brand (if they have such a thing in Uruguay). I think Axe has pulled this off.. Just.  From a measurement perspective there’s also an implication for getting hold of some hard engagement measures using this kind of SMS mechanism --  I’m sure the media bods at Axe will be keeping abreast of all things in that area.

sorry.


iDon’t care..

Posted: October 22nd, 2009 | Author: Clip Bored | Filed under: Ads, Uncategorized, Viral Ads | Tags: , , , | No Comments »

Hilarious.

Following on from the iPhone baiting viral from Verizon I blogged about a few days ago, a group of die hard (and technically skilled) Apple fans have put together this viral in response. Fair game to them but I only see this adding more buzz to the Verizon viral in the first place.

Unless that was the plan all along..? *strokes chin*


iDon’t..

Posted: October 20th, 2009 | Author: Clip Bored | Filed under: Ads, Uncategorized, Viral Ads | Tags: , , , , | No Comments »

I am fond of my Android powered G1. I like its integration with all things Google, I like Cupcake’s friendly interface…but that’s about it unfortunately.

I admit, I get massive bouts of iPhone envy whenever I step into the Apple store or happen to get on the Tube (everyone has one). So it’s nice to see bitchy little ads like this time to time. Sure, it’s tacky and a bit obvious but it made me get a little more excited about Android. If you can’t be bothered to go to the website -- it’s something from Verizon, in anticipation of a new Android powered Motorola handset coming out in the US at the end of the year.