No company in modern corporate history has developed a more cultlike, devoted customer base than Apple. I’ve often cited them as an example of what other firms strive for, or should strive for, in bonding with their customers.
Now, Apple seems intent on turning the iPhone, which began as a public relations coup, into a PR disaster. Even worse, their corporate bullying isn’t targeting the competition, but rather their loyal customers. Apple has been cited as a shining star in just about every book on corporate branding; now they are rewriting branding strategy themselves. Here are the first two chapters in Apple’s guide on how to turn fans into sullen, disaffected owners:
I’m surprised a new version of the commercial showing a disaffected iPhone owner hurling her iBrick through a massive image of Steve Jobs hasn’t surfaced on YouTube yet. I bet we see one soon. We did find this one:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-ZEvyYplv34
Apple has always had an arrogant streak in its corporate culture, but when it turns this tendency against its own best customers, that’s a problem. Can Apple recover from these miscues? If they recognize what they are doing soon enough, they can. Apple users have been tolerant of past mistakes - bad products, weird policies, and the like. Apple has to realize, though, that fandom may be enduring but it isn’t permanent. Fans have to be cultivated and kept happy. We’ll wait to see what Apple’s next chapter looks like.
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