Group4 Apple
Group4 Apple
Group4 Apple
Id shut it down and give the money back to the shareholders, Michael Dell on Apple, in 1997 with our new products and our new store and our new build-to-order, we're coming after you, buddy., Steve Jobs to Michael Dell, in 1997
Group 4
Balakrishnan V (010) Basant Kumar (011) Harini Ravishankar (020) Janani Ganesh (023) R Anirudh Raghavendra (039)
Early Years
Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak College dropouts
Founded Apple Computer on April Fools day 1976 Apple I built in Jobs familys garage 200 sold within months
Early Years
IBM PC Microsofts DOS and Intel microprocessor
Stolid and gray vs. Graphics and sound enhanced Apple II Open system vs. Proprietary designs Apples revenues grew; Market share fell sharply 6.2% in 1982
[1984] Macintosh
Breakthrough in ease-of-use, industrial design and tech. elegance Slow performance and lack of Mac-compatible S/W limited sales 1983-84 Net income fell 17%; Company in crisis
Position in 1990
Only significant H/w and S/w alternative to the IBM standard Typically designed products from scratch Unique components No backward integration; Proprietary OS bundled along with Mac IBM narrowed the gap in ease-of-use with Win3.0 IBM users put up with their machines; Apple users love their Macs As IBM dropped prices, Macs looked increasingly overpriced High costs 9% to R&D vs. 5% at Compaq Glide path to history
1992 Less public co-operation between Intel and Novell Project Star Trek to rework Mac OS
Spindler [1993-95]
[1988-90] Head of Apple Europe
Tripled revenues, accounting for 25% of Apples sales worldwide Strong Operating Manager, No-nonsense style Sharp contrast to Sculleys focus on technology and marketing
Spindler [1993-95]
[1995] Apple cut prices by 25% and unit sales surged
Briefly regained posn. as leading PC seller; clearly losing momentum 0% of Windows users would consider buying a Mac >50% of Mac users would consider buying an Intel-based PC
International Expansion
[1992] 45% of sales from outside US; Significant success in Japan Targetted 15-16% market share in China, by 2000
Internal Changes
16% (2,500 employee) layoff; R&D cut to 6% of sales [1996] $69M loss; 1300 layoffs Gilbert Amelio appointed CEO
Amelio [1996-97]
Stock price at its lowest, in more than a decade
[1995] Market share dropped from 6% to 3%; Education market share fell from 41% to 27%
Decided to cut Apples losses by cancelling next-gen OS
Had already cost $500M in R&D
The PC Industry
[2002] PCs were a $220B global industry
Cost around $730 to make a desktop that would retail for $860
Microprocessor Costliest - $50 to $500
The PC Industry
PC Manufacturing (contd.)
Other components of the box cost $250-$350; Peripheral devices $90-$140; Monitor - $100; Windows 98 - $45; Labor - $35 $499 Cut down on Processor, Memory; $2499 Latest devices Early 1980s 5% of sales on R&D; 2001 Around 1.5%-2% Innovations in manufacturing, distribution and marketing Contract manufacturing; Flexible,high-volume plant in low-cost locn Late 1990s Large contract manufacturers of vertically integrated systems; Build everything; Based in China, Taiwan (Low labor rates) PC makers moved from build-to-stock to build-to-order JIT Reduced costs by ~10% - Inventory carrying costs & Product returns and decline in price protection costs (guarantees to distributors) [2002] components costs decline by close to 6% per quarter; Prices declining at around 4-9% per year
n Dist .
Buyers Business (60%), Government (8%), Education (8%) and Home (24%)
Purchase Drivers Home (Price); Business (Service); Education (S/w)
1980s No more than a few PCs at a time; Established brands through service computer dealers 1990s Knowledgeable customers; Alternative channels
Superstores for bulk purchases; Mail-Order outlets-30-50% discount Value Added Resellers Fulfill growing demand for networked PCs
Late 1990s Marketing over the WWW 2001 40% of sales through direct channels (power users); 25% through commercial channels; 25% through retail channels (1st time buyers); Remainder - Internet telesales
Alternative Technologies
By late 1990s, talk of PCs demise, Post-PC / PC-Plus era Simpler computing devices to complement/replace PC (Networked) PDAs, Smartphones, Set Top Boxes, Video Game boxes (Xbox)
Apple Turnaround ?
[1997] Microsoft invested $150M and confirmed commitment to developing core products like Office
Stock touched a 52 week high; Board deferred search for CEO
Apple Turnaround ?
[1998] iMac Internet-age computer for the rest of us
Priced at $1299; First entry into low-priced consumer market Low-end CPU, Distinctive translucent case, Plug-n-Play Initiated project shortly after taking over; Completed in 10 months Deliver things that the user most cared about Internet, Simplicity $100M advertising campaign to promote the iMac Sold 278,000 in the first 6 weeks; 800,000 by the year (discounting) 32% of iMac buyers were new buyers; 13% replacing Wintel Within 3.5 years, 6M iMacs sold (vs. 300M PCs sold)
Apple Turnaround ?
Jobs hoped that Apples reinvigorated image would bring back large number of S/W developers
Planned to launch new OS in early 2001 that would be incompatible with most existing Mac programs To lessen migration problems, Jobs decided to ship each new computer with two OS Mac OS 9 and Mac OS X Mac OS X UNIX bases, technically advanced, stable environment Evangelists to woo and support important developers Lined up 400 ISVs to deliver 1200 applications for OS X [2001]No. of participants in the developer program went up by 75%
Other Products
[1998] Shut down Newton and a portable computer for education (Had spent $500M over the last 6 years) Expanded into peripherals market with iPod and software
Apple Turnaround ?
Internal Changes
Top priority to improve Apples operating efficiency Popular paid sabbatical plan Pruned Apples organization Eliminating units and Centralizing responsibility; Continued to reduce headcount, facilities and outsource manufacturing tasks Close relationship with Foxconn (contract manufacturer) Revamped Apples distribution system, eliminating smaller outlets [1997] Website to sell directly to consumers for the first time [2001] First retail store in McLean, Virginia; By end of 2001, Apple had 27 company owned boutiques in mjor cities
Apple Turnaround ?
Internal Changes (contd.)
By early 2002, $4.3B in cash and short term investments Inventory down to less than 2 days of sales; Cash conversion cycle reduced from 53 to 22 days Increased R&D expenditures to 8% of net sales (from 5%) [2001] Sales of $5.4B, down 32% from previous year Net loss of $25M included an operating loss of $344M Market share fell from 46% to 23% in the education market
Analysis
Apples Competitive Advantage
Know the needs of the user and deliver a superior and rich user experience through great products that their customers love In the early years, GUI and application software was a major adv.
This enabled them to charge a huge price premium for their products
Analysis
Apples Strategies after 1990 (contd.)
Amelio Years Filling the gap
Cancelled development of next-gen OS (Sunk cost = $500M)
Acquired NeXT software to compete with Windows; Jobs as advisor
Weaknesses:
Heavy investment in research; Not a lean operations management unlike Dell Not completely independent as it is dependent on Motorola and IBM for processor chips
Opportunities:
Taking advantage of Mac OS as a safe, reliable and secure system Leveraging the popularity with iPod, iTunes, iMovie and iPhoto
Threats:
Closed system: application software not easily available Less penetration in the market; Premium segment, research oriented -> Hence costly
Apple in 2012
Apple Computer Inc., renamed Apple Inc.
iPod Huge success; Up to 7 generations of products
Variety of products Classic, Nano, Touch, Shuffle iTunes Major revolution Encouraged users to buy songs, rather than download them Market leader in online music services
Patent wars with Samsung [2011] Tim Cook took over as CEO