Apple: Bringing You the Innovations of Others Time and Time Again

by Chris Seibold Sep 13, 2005

Sometimes greater concepts can be gleaned by first looking inside our own psyches. Hence at this point it is time for an exercise that involves a small bit of personal introspection. To fully understand the nature of innovation versus refinement you must ask yourself one question: Do I like ranch dressing? If your answer was “yes” then hopefully today’s column will be of interest. If your answer was of a more negative bent then your time will probably be better spent attempting to win a Mac Mini by posting in the forums.

Presumably all readers left at this point are fans of Ranch Dressing and won’t mind a retelling of the lore of salad toppers in order to illustrate a more Apple specific point. Ranch Dressing was invented at, surprisingly, a ranch known as Hidden Valley. While producing dressing was not the stated goal of the ranch enough visitors liked the stuff that there was soon a regional market for the buttermilk mayonnaise concoction. Clorox (bleach maker and foodstuff provider? An obviously symbiotic relationship) purchased the rights and recipe to the beloved dressing and spent ten years trying to bottle the amalgamation in order to appeal the broader market. The rub was that the product was not stable. The one way, it was felt, to make the product long lasting was to increase the acidity. This had the unfortunate side effect of impacting the taste in a decidedly negative manner. But consumers want their dressings pre-mixed so the acidity was left high and the product was shipped. This is the moment where things get interesting: even with a compromised taste the dressing soon became the best selling salad dressing on the market. It turns out that only a very few people had actually tasted Ranch Dressing the way it was supposed to be prepared so they had no frame of reference for the more acrid tasting version. In short Clorox had taken a relatively unknown product, made it inherently worse in the taste department, yet managed to give the consumer something they had never had before: a convenient manner to purchase Ranch Dressing. One would hardly call making a dressing taste worse innovation but it was the refinement of bottling that resulted in the ranch flavored world we see around us.

Apple follows in the footsteps of Clorox more often than most people would like to admit. In fact an examination of Apple’s supposed recent “innovations” reveals that the large majority of the time Apple merely refines products rather than actually coming up with new ideas. That notion might seem heretical in some circles where Apple is regarded as the only company truly capable of innovation but it, nonetheless, remains the truth. Honestly it is hard to find an example where Apple actually comes up with a new idea, instead we are faced with a reality where Apple refines a product to conform to the taste of the consumer. Apple may make something sleeker, easier to use, or more appealing but very rarely do they generate an entirely new product.

Update: Every time you see iMovie think Final Cut. iMovie was written gorund up, Final Cut was not. My apologies to the minds behind iMovie.
iMovie fits the analogy of Ranch Dressing the best. When iMovie version 1 was revealed people hailed it as a major breakthrough and an incredible innovation (I was among the loudest proponents) but the truth is that iMovie was fairly pathetic when first introduced, it only seemed great because the vast majority of computer users had nothing to measure iMovie against. The similarities don’t stop there. Not only was the original iMovie limited it was also a program based on an application conceived outside of Apple. The Cupertino giant did not invent iMovie they merely purchased an existing program and polished to a point where the masses would fall in love. Far from being the exception to the rule this is the norm.

Of course other examples abound. The GUI was first implemented by Xerox and made useable by Apple. The ubiquitous iPod was not the first digital audio player to market but it was the first digital audio player that was ready for mass consumption. Pick ten Apple “innovations” at random and it is likely nine of them will have been implemented first by others and merely refined for the consumer by Apple. Why even he amazingly cool iPod nano is not really that innovative. The concept of a flash based music player with a screen has been around for quite a few years. As much as many like to think of Apple as a company where innovation happens with enviable regularity it is closer to reality to note that Apple is one of the more talented companies when it comes to picking what the end user actually desires and delivering the concept in a palatable manner.

Surely someone will think that noting the obvious is somehow derogatory. Our society places a high value on innovation and those that bring us the latest and greatest gadgets are held in high esteem. Those that are perceived as merely implementing features others have invented are regarded as money-grubbing poachers willing to steal others inspiration just to cram a few dollars in the overstuffed coffers. Partly this is due to the concept of the American Dream where the underdog can invent something useful and retire to their own island in the Caribbean and partly because it is seen as a failure if a company misses out on some vital, and post introduction, obvious feature. This notion discounts the valuable work a company does by taking a concept that is simply going nowhere and presenting the idea in a manner that the public at large will understand and embrace.

Using the iPod as our working example (yet again) we remember that Apple didn’t invent the mp3 player or even come up with the iPod concept. In fact that honor goes to Tony Fadell. When Mr. Fadell approached Apple after being rebuffed by a few other companies Appe saw the promise and jumped on board. The story is long (though not uninteresting) but in the end what you have is a product conceived by someone outside of Apple, designed with a heavy dose of Jobsian input and then released to the public. This realization might seem to serve as a dampening event for the enthusiasm some people feel for everything Apple. Remember though that the iPod brings a lot of joy to a large number of people (not just Apple shareholders). Without Apple buying into the concept and promoting the iPod the majority of people would be without the seeming glee the iPod brings them. So one is forced to ask a question. Which is really more important: coming up with a new idea no one knows about or spotting the diamond in a field of coal? The answer is, obviously, the ability to take the unknown and present it in a pleasing fashion. After all an invention, no matter how cool, that remains relegated to the backwater of public consciousness does very little good. Apple may not be the fount of innovation people seem to think they are but they still provide a service other companies seem to be unable to master and that is more than enough reason to celebrate the folks in Cupertino.

 

Comments

  • I agree.  Run innovation through your Tiger dictionary.  “to renew, alter, make changes to something established” as opposed to simply invent.  Apple is a world-class innovator, if not inventor.

    Dave Marsh had this to say on Sep 13, 2005 Posts: 44
  • Beeblebrox, nice try, but read the previous sentence to what you quoted:

    Indeed, in every case, it’s greatly improved the technology. That counts as innovation, IMMHO.

    That’s why I can claim, “And the sales bares that out.”

    Nowhere did I claim sales solely represent innovation. Dave Marsh (and others) support our claim that Apple’s changes, alterations and add-ons to established technology makes it a world-class innovator.

    breuklen had this to say on Sep 13, 2005 Posts: 31
  • You could also argue that in the process of making an existing idea better, Apple does a great deal of innovation.  Continuing the example of the iPod, wouldn’t one consider the UI and click wheel to be fairly innovative in their own right?  After all, the ability to easily traverse the menu with one hand is what’s made the iPod the most popular MP3 player by far.

    Same thing with the Mac UI.  Sure Xerox came up with the idea, but the Mac developers put an aweful lot of their own innovative ideas into it to turn it into something useful and powerful.

    ccrandall77 had this to say on Sep 13, 2005 Posts: 4
  • Indeed, in every case, it’s greatly improved the technology. That counts as innovation, IMMHO.

    That’s why I can claim, “And the sales bares that out.”

    But you’re still using sales as proof of something.  I could likewise argue that Microsoft greatly improved the operability of the GUI and the SALES BARE THAT OUT.  And since Windows sales outnumber Mac sales by roughly 30 to 1, then the sales bare out that position more than yours.

    That argument would apply equally to the iPod.  Apple improved the operability and the sales bare that out.  It means that the customer reaction verifies the improved operability.

    My point is simply that if you apply that standard to one, then you have to apply it to the other.  But Mac zealots don’t do that, which is why I say it’s a weak argument.

    Beeblebrox had this to say on Sep 13, 2005 Posts: 2220
  • MS is a monopoly that has gone out of its way to stifle competition. Where has Apple done the same with the iPod (or any of its products)? Again, I never claimed—nor would I ever—that sales are the sole factor that proves it’s an innovator. Others have several great arguments to prove this over and over again.

    Has MS made innovations? Probably. I’m a Mac/Apple user (for the most part) so I wouldn’t truly know what those would include.

    breuklen had this to say on Sep 13, 2005 Posts: 31
  • Have to remember though, looking at the iPod that alot of it was quiet simply very slick marketing, and also the music companies getting behind it. The device itself wasn’t startling as Creative and others had been doing it for years before hand…heck my original MP3 player was ancient compared to the first iPod. But since when has Creative ever advertised anywhere near as slickly as the iPod adverts? off the top of my head I don’t think they ever have.

    As others have said, Apple very rarely invents. The Newton was probably the last real invention. As for innovation, yes they are good at taking other peoples ideas, sticking it in a white shiny box and giving a good sprinkle of marketing and fashion appeal and off it goes. Just talking to people generally its like a blinkin’ plague the iPod, and the fashion/marketing makes them think they are “different”. But how different can anyone be when you’re the same as 75% of every other MP3 user? you aren’t different, you are merely a sheep. A part of me whats to scream “think different” to them, but then again I think that would fall on deaf fashion victim ears though.

    Even the Nano isn’t innovative really. Hate to say it again but Creative had the Slim out what, 18-24 months ago? ok it hasn’t the same capacity, or the colour screen. But its smaller, and probably the Nano’s inspiration.

    Nyadach had this to say on Sep 13, 2005 Posts: 29
  • Again, I never claimed—nor would I ever—that sales are the sole factor that proves it’s an innovator.

    Exactly my point.  You only use it as it applies to Apple.  This “argument”: Indeed, in every case, it’s greatly improved the technology. That counts as innovation, IMMHO. And the sales bares that out, doesn’t actually mean anything since it ONLY applies in defense of Apple and no one else.

    In fact, the comparison between the iPod and the Mac exposes are rather interesting hypocrisy with Mac zealots in regards to sales.  Do you win market share by having the best product?  It depends on if you’re asking about the Mac or the iPod.  Are the smaller market share competitors “also-rans” who shouldn’t even bother trying?  It depends on if you’re asking about the Mac or the iPod.  Is closing your system to licensing and shutting out competitors by abusing your monopoly a good thing or a bad thing?  It depends on if you’re asking about the Mac or the iPod.

    Beeblebrox had this to say on Sep 13, 2005 Posts: 2220
  • But how different can anyone be when you’re the same as 75% of every other MP3 user?

    Excellent point.  But they’re only interested in “thinking different” when it comes to the Mac, and only as long as the Mac has single digit market share.

    The point is that all of these arguments are about being pro-Apple no matter what.  So buying a Windows machine because that’s all you’re aware of or because everyone else is using them makes you a sheep.  But buying an iPod for the same reasons doesn’t.  Creative trying to increase its market share from 7% against the iPod’s 75% makes it an “also ran” who should just give up even bothering.  But Apple trying to increase its market share from 3% against Windows 95% is still somehow qualifies as an OS “war.”

    Beeblebrox had this to say on Sep 13, 2005 Posts: 2220
  • When the iPod first came out, I laughed at it. That’s before dealing with all the problems of other music players—at the time, I just bought a minidisc recorder from SONY. The sound was inferior, recording music to it was done in real time and it was somewhat cumbersome. Apple just gets it and people have flocked to them because of the innovations.

    Other companies have music/MP3 players with more bells and whistles, but I don’t think any of them are as easy to use. Especially given Apple’s trifecta: iPod, iTunes & iTMS.

    In a sense, each user’s music collection sets it apart from any other iPod owner, so it’s not the same as being part of a collective. This is further so with all of the accessories that can make your iPod especially unique. I don’t see Apple losing ground to others for years and years to come. That’s what innovation done on a grand, nearly perfect scale does for a company.

    breuklen had this to say on Sep 13, 2005 Posts: 31
  • Apple just gets it and people have flocked to them because of the innovations.

    I don’t agree with this at all, and it brings up another point.  What is the real value of innovation to the consumer in choosing a product?  Does the consumer care who invented the GUI, do they care who innovated any given feature of any given prodcut?  Do they buy Dells because they are innovative?  Do they buy iPods because they are innovative?  Or do they buy them for more practical considerations, like ease-of-use, ubiquity, price?  I think the latter trumps innovation almost every time.

    For example, I use Final Cut Pro.  There is almost nothing really innovative about it.  It borrows almost everything from Avid and Premiere (and Premiere has returned the favor by borrowing from FCP).

    I don’t use it because it’s innovative.  I use it because it works well, it’s cheap, and that’s what most of my colleagues use.

    In a sense, each user’s music collection sets it apart from any other iPod owner, so it’s not the same as being part of a collective.

    The same could be said of Windows users and the variety of software found on their machines.

    But only IF you apply the same standards to Apple products and Microsoft products.  But so far no Apple zealot seems too interested in doing that.

    This is further so with all of the accessories that can make your iPod especially unique.

    This is your idea of “unique?”  Choosing a different mass market accessory to go with your mass market gadget?

    Beeblebrox had this to say on Sep 13, 2005 Posts: 2220
  • I don’t see how you can disagree that Apple “gets it”.  Ease of use can certainly be seen as an essential part of innovation and an essential part of what Apple “gets”.  It seems to me that other mp3 players didn’t take off simply because it was too difficult to manage the music and therefore too difficult to use the product.  The biggest reason the iPod is successful (as breuklen pointed out) is iTunes.  It’s a no brainer for the typical user to get their music from their computer onto the player.  Couple that with a very simple navigation system and industrial design that ties the whole thing together and you have a pretty innovative product.  When Apple ported it over to Windows, it proved that point - the iPod just took over the market.  The sales aren’t the issue (as has been noted), but the adoption by millions of people is.

    As I recall when the first Mac came out there was that similar kind of feeling.  It was so easy to use that the not-so-computer-literate were able to take advantage of what a computer could offer, right out of the box.  Xerox didn’t “get it” because they couldn’t get it out to the user, and Microsoft took forever to catch on as well.  Of course what helped Microsoft finally take over was the huge installed base of DOS based computers that business had already invested in(you can see various articles on this at daringfireball.net).  You can’t tell me, that it was the “innovations” of Windows 3.1 that people were flocking to!

    Yes, MS catches up, and innovates in their own right.  But where Apple excels, and truly innovates, is making something easier for the average person to use.  And IMO, they have a much better track record of creating products that get that right the first time.

    domarch had this to say on Sep 13, 2005 Posts: 12
  • I have to agree with several of the comments regarding the definition of innovation. There is a great deal of innovation involved in taking a concept and making it functionable and marketable. And as said above, the ranch dressing analogy is not quite appropriate since Clorox made the product worse in order to get it to the market. I think that that is a better analogy for MS.

    nickfit had this to say on Sep 13, 2005 Posts: 4
  • Ah but did Clorox really make the product worse? People would simply skip ranch dressing altogether if they had to mix it up themselves. Put it in a bottle and whammo people buy it like crazy. Like I pointed out earlier the analogy only works if you like ranch dressing (I do. In fact if I could have a Homer Simpson ranch dressing hose I’d be there).

    As for the definition of innovation in the strictest sense the criticism are correct. In the broader sense when people say Apple innovation they are gnerally imagining that Apple came up with idea all by themselves. The trackpad was innovative, putting the keyboard towards the screen on laptops was innovative. Applefying a movie program they purchased (iMovie) not so innovative. When leopard rolls out and features a bunch of Delicious library type enhancements people that haven’t used delicious library will call that innovative but the real coolness happened with delicious library,

    Chris Seibold had this to say on Sep 13, 2005 Posts: 354
  • This is further so with all of the accessories that can make your iPod especially unique.

    That’s what makes my windows pc especially unique, how many people have the same Samsung Syncmaster 3 monitor? (a 15” relyc, beige, boxy, dirty, wonder why collectors haven’t started calling)

    martunibo had this to say on Sep 13, 2005 Posts: 37
  • I don’t see how you can disagree that Apple “gets it”.  Ease of use can certainly be seen as an essential part of innovation and an essential part of what Apple “gets”.

    The notion I disagree with is that people buy products BECAUSE they are innovative.  There’s simply too much evidence to the contrary.

    As far as Apple “getting it,” it’s a meaningless platitude.  You can believe it if you want, but Apple has had more failures than successes in terms of consumer products launches.

    The sales aren’t the issue (as has been noted), but the adoption by millions of people is.

    Again, you could defend Windows the same way.  Does adoption by millions prove anything?  It either proves that Windows and the iPod, both dominating their respective markets, are innovative or it doesn’t.  It can’t be both.

    Beeblebrox had this to say on Sep 13, 2005 Posts: 2220
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