The Psychoanalysis of Steve Jobs

Damir Marusic

Here’s an excellent column about Apple’s mysterious CEO by Robert Cringely (via John Gruber). I’ve never met the man, so I can’t judge whether the psychological conclusions of the article hold water. The business rationale for how Jobs pulled off the iPhone price drop is, I wager, spot on.

So why did he do it? Why did he cut the price? I have no inside information here, but it seems pretty obvious to me: Apple introduced the iPhone at $599 to milk the early adopters and somewhat limit demand then dropped the price to $399 (the REAL price) to stimulate demand now that the product is a critical success and relatively bug-free. At least 500,000 iPhones went out at the old price, which means Apple made $100 million in extra profit.
Had nobody complained, Apple would have left it at that. But Jobs expected complaints and had an answer waiting — the $100 Apple store credit. This was no knee-jerk reaction, either. It was already there just waiting if needed. Apple keeps an undeserved $50 million and customers get $50 million back. Or do they? Some customers will never use their store credit. Those who do use it will nearly all buy something that costs more than $100. And, most importantly, those who bought their iPhones at an AT&T store will have to make what might be their first of many visits to an Apple Store. That is alone worth the $50 per customer this escapade will eventually cost Apple, taking into account unused credits and Apple Store wholesale costs.
So Apple still comes out $75 million ahead, which is important to Steve Jobs.

Jobs-watchers and Apple enthusiasts should take the time to read the whole thing.

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