Opinion

Apple is changing its image and that’s a good thing

Dominik Bärlocher
21.4.2020
Translation: Jessica Johnson-Ferguson

The iPhone SE2, which is actually just called iPhone SE, is the latest coup in Apple’s lengthy process of changing its image. Bye-bye elitism, hello grandmas!

Apple’s your chum. That sounds wrong but pretty much sums up what the Cupertino-based company wants us to believe. Apple wants to be your friend, not a tech company. A mate you have a laugh with. Not a patronising giver of gifts in return for a humble obolus of several thousand francs.

There’s nothing that sums this up better than the smartphone ads.

In September 2017, Apple’s former chief design officer Jony Ive uttered something seemingly profound about «a physical object that disappears into the experience». Jeez, Jony, you’re quite the elitist little upstart.

And all of this was available at a special price of 1,500 francs. No wonder Apple fans have a reputation of being elitist arses. If that’s the message they’re being fed, it’s no surprise they can’t help repeating it.

But that’s all changing now. The iPhone SE is only a market-oriented repositioning of a trend that’s been emerging.

Communication, not technology

Apples ex head of design, Jony Ive, floats around in spheres that most Swiss art directors wouldn’t dare to dream of. No amount of cocaine in an given trendy club can produce verbal rubbish on par with «Developing the form and display together defines a whole new integration.»

Finally, Apple is taking this into account after a decade of pretentious blah. Since the iPhone SE2 – now officially just called «iPhone SE» without the 2 – the overblown babble and the «utterly uncompromised vision of the future» are over. Apple now sounds as follows:

iPhone 11 Pro called. It wants its chip back.
Apple.ch", 17 April 2020

Humour? Apple? Now that’s bound to make a few art directors’ turtle necks unfurl.

The tone is also reflected in the introductory ad for the iPhone SE. The new one, that is. Not the one from 2016.

Apple likes your momma

Is Apple going down the #yolo route, to use an ancient meme? No, Apple leaves nothing to chance. It’s not something the company has ever done nor ever will do. Nothing grows into something so dominant and good if playfulness becomes a marketing strategy.

Apple needs new customers.

All those hipstertown art directors, slick young bankers or coffee-clutching art communication culture students just aren’t cutting it anymore. Expensive is no longer good enough.

«Expensive means good» doesn’t work anymore. Until a few years ago, iPhones were top of their league in terms of price tags. At least that’s how the public perceived them. Huawei once brought a 2,000-franc phone to market. If you’re after a gold or diamond-encrusted custom-built phone, we’re looking at at least 20,000 francs. But as regards off-the-peg phones, the iPhone was considered the most expensive one out there.

Then the market tagged along. A brand-new Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultra is similarly priced to an iPhone 11 Pro Max. Apple could now say: «No sweat. Let’s make the iPhone more expensive» – the turtleneck division would still buy them. And why not? After all, the device really isn’t bad. However, your mum would have none of it: «They’ve got to be joking! I would never...»

And so, Apple decided to do the exact opposite. Series 11 of the iPhone is comparatively affordable, and the new iPhone SE is almost offensively cheap. Your mum will look at the iPhone SE and say: «That’s pretty,» and the salesperson will reply: «Yes, and it can do so much». And they’re both right. Fast forward about 450 francs later, and your momma’s an Apple customer. Hopefully for the rest of her life, if Apple has its way.

Red is better than shooting motion pictures

On 27 June 2019, Jony Ive left Apple. After almost 30 years, Apple felt obliged to go down a new communication route. Over were the days of Ive’s deep and smooth voice. He’s now opening his own company called LoveFrom and continues to design for Apple.

With Ive’s departure, Apple has also laid off the title Chief Design Officer. There will be no direct successor to step into Ive’s footsteps. All tasks will now be tackled by Chief Operating Officer Jeff Williams and a team of designers. Their new strategy isn’t new. Samsung already made the shift with the launch of the Galaxy A – from reserved and techy to chummy and funny. Others are bound to follow.

Because what counts in the end isn’t «The singular vision of technological idiosyncrasy,» but «Wow. The iPhone now also comes in red».

194 people like this article


User Avatar
User Avatar

Journalist. Author. Hacker. A storyteller searching for boundaries, secrets and taboos – putting the world to paper. Not because I can but because I can’t not.


Smartphone
Follow topics and stay updated on your areas of interest

Opinion

This is a subjective opinion of the editorial team. It doesn't necessarily reflect the position of the company.

Show all

These articles might also interest you

  • Product test

    Testing the iPhone Air: style over substance?

    by Samuel Buchmann

  • Product test

    iPhone 17 review: are my Plus days over?

    by Florian Bodoky

  • Background information

    iPhone turns 15: a story of revolution, campers, haters and a smartphone

    by Dominik Bärlocher