Apple's 128GB iPad aims to drive profits up a path competitors can't easily follow

Posted:
in iPad edited January 2014
Apple's surprise unveiling of a new "fat" iPad 4 model equipped with 128 gigabytes of storage expands the company's tablet platform offerings into premium territory, a feat its competitors will have trouble duplicating.

iPad


The introduction of a new high-capacity iPad is significant in several respects. First, Apple appears to have successfully "doubled down" in securing secrecy as its chief executive Tim Cook promised to do last summer. The first inkling of the new fat iPad was first floated over the weekend, just one business day before it was officially announced.

Perhaps more importantly, the surprise announcement also demonstrates how quickly (and unpredictably) Apple can shift direction. Since the introduction of the iPad mini last fall, critics have complained that the smaller form factor iPad didn't deliver an sharp enough screen to attract customers and, at the same time, that widespread adoption of the lower priced model would erode the company's relatively high margins.

It turned out they were at least half right in that contradictory prediction: Apple outlined that its margins could decrease in the coming quarter due to selling a large number of the very popular new lower priced iPad minis.

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However, the iPad's critics are so preoccupied with the notion that low prices alone can drive sales that they failed to anticipate that Apple could also offer a new, more expensive and higher capacity full sized iPad, or that there could be an audience for it.

If it is successful in selling in meaningful quantities, the larger capacity, higher margin new fat iPad has the potential to disrupt the predicted direction of Apple's margins. The same disruption of pundits' expectations has occured time after time over the last decade as Apple has released alluring new products that have broken the ostensible trend toward cheaper commodity devices.

How big of a development is a 128-gigabyte iPad?

At first glance, Apple's 128-gigabyte iPad doesn't seem like much of an advance. After all, the company's competitors won't have too much difficulty in adding more memory to their own tablets. However, they'll have a very hard time selling such a high end product, particularly at the same price Apple can charge.

Historically, Android licensees have struggled to create competitive tablet products at iPad prices. Even after abandoning profitability, Amazon has had to work hard to beat Apple's prices on the low end; there's no evidence that the company is selling any real volume of its higher end Kindle models. Google's conventional Android licensees have similarly had enough difficulty shipping any low end tablets; larger more expensive models have been DOA.

Microsoft and its Windows licensees have tried to sell higher priced tablet for a decade, but these faced direct competition with those same companies' conventional notebooks and netbooks. Apple is the only PC maker to have any breathing room between its most expensive tablets ($699 to $829) and its cheapest notebooks (which start at $999).

For companies and institutions that are heavily invested in iOS (as many Fortune 500 companies are), paying an extra $100 for double the device's document and app capacity is an easy decision to make. However, switching to an alternative platform and vendor (at any cost) involves a significant barrier.

Going forward, Apple's ability to ship large, consistent volumes of iOS devices will have a powerful impact on its ability to source cost effective components, particularly storage memory. This not only benefits its iOS devices, but also its Mac offerings, nearly all of which have transitioned to solid state memory in some form.

Backed by economies of scale in sourcing storage memory cheaply in high volumes, Apple is returning to its historical trend with iPods in offering more storage than its competitors could at the same price.

As iOS apps grow in size (a trend accelerated by Retina display graphics) alongside media files (similarly abetted by HD videos), consumers will increasingly demand more storage at affordable prices. The more Apple can do to fill up its users' iOS devices, the more demand it will stoke for greater storage capacities, resulting in higher sales volumes of memory and lower component costs.

While its competitors shave down storage capacity to reach impressive entry level prices, Apple appears focused on delivering value-oriented products that are profitable. Storage capacity is one of the most visible, valuable features of a mobile device, and therefore is something users will willing pay more to obtain.

Apple fails to follow the herd

Apple's new 128-gigabyte fat iPad bucks the trend toward cheaper, less powerful tablet and netbooks, the kind of lower end devices that many observers had predicted to rapidly win tablet market share away from Apple's iPad line.

Google's Nexus 7, for example, delivered its breakthrough $250 starting price by only offering 16 gigabytes of storage, which like Apple's iPad line, is not expandable. Amazon's Kindle Fire similarly reaches below $200 by offering 16 gigabytes of storage. Neither company's smaller form factor tablets offer a 64-gigabyte version like Apple's iPad mini.

Because they are competing almost exclusively on price, they can't offer a 64-gigabyte version without pushing their products squarely into the price range of Apple's iPad line. And as the first generation of Android 3.0 Honeycomb tablets aptly demonstrated, there's not really an insatiable demand for tablets in general, and certainly not for non-iPad tablets priced like the iPad.

The number of consumers willing to pay more than $200 for an entertainment device quickly drop off as the price goes up. However, Apple isn't marketing its iPads exclusively toward the budget-minded consumer market that Amazon, Google, Samsung and other tablet makers have targeted.

Apple holds a commanding grasp on the mobile enterprise market with iOS. Those sales, to government and corporate users who are looking for value rather than just a low entry price, are helping Apple to sustain higher end sales of both tablets and smartphones.

Higher end mobile devices are far more profitable. That explains why Samsung earned just half of Apple's profits in the most recent winter quarter despite selling 32 percent more handsets globally.

Put simply, Samsung wasn't selling nearly as many iPhone-class smartphones (or iPad-class tablets) as Apple was. The new 128-gigabyte fat iPad is just a new step in Apple's same direction.

This all happened before

Apple similarly ignored pundits' insistence in 2008 that it had to deliver a cheap Mac netbook or it would be overwhelmed in the sub-notebook market by an avalanche of cheap devices running Windows or perhaps Linux or Android.

Instead, the company continued to perfect its premium MacBook Air line, outfitted with such luxuries as solid state storage, rigid aluminum cases and backlit keyboards. Consumers quickly grew disillusioned with cheap netbooks, forcing the industry to shift its direction in an effort to clone the MacBook Air, as typified by Intel's "Ultrabook" program.

A similar trend occurred in MP3 players; while critics consistently praised cheaper, lower end iPod alternatives (including a Microsoft-led consortium of device makers selling "PlaysForSure" branded MP3 players nearly a decade ago), Apple retained and expanded its audience of customers with increasingly more sophisticated devices sporting new software features, slim designs and increased storage capacities.

As with netbooks, the industry trend toward producing cheap MP3 players collapsed under consumer dissatisfaction, forcing Microsoft to design its own new MP3 products patterned closely after Apple's higher end iPods. Those "Zune" efforts ultimately failed, in part because it is far more difficult to copy an established, sophisticated product selling at a premium profit that sustains its continued development. That is, ironically, a reality that Microsoft has enjoyed the flip side of with its long running Office franchise.

Today, Apple's most popular iPod remains the relatively expensive iPod touch, which has claimed half or more of the company's total iPod sales even as the iPod family has retained a dominant share of around 70 percent or more of the total market for MP3 players.

Predictions that cheap, low end MP3 players, netbooks, phones and now tablets would cause Apple's existing market share and profitability to rapidly collapse have simply been consistently wrong over the past decade. The reason for this is tied to Apple's profitability.

Profits drive market power

Customers in any market prefer lower prices. However, making products cheaper is far more difficult than it might appear. Most efforts to reduce the price of tablets or smartphones or MP3 players or computers have revolved around using slower, heavier and less capable components, resulting in not just a cheaper product, but an obviously less valuable one.

While its competitors seem to be focused on lower entry prices, Apple has focused on apparent value. The factors that contribute toward value are not always simple or straightforward. When Apple started selling iPods, adding more storage memory initially resulted in a more desirable product.

When the iPhone appeared, it packed an iPod-style amount of storage, making it more expensive than most of its smartphone competition. That extra RAM, however, also made it notably more useful, serving as a phone, an iPod and a software platform capable of running a real browser, desktop class email and sophisticated apps and games.

Customers lined up to pay extra for Apple's premium device. Other vendors at the time were making equally (or more) expensive luxury class smartphones. But those devices were selling in very small volumes. Apple made profitable, high end smartphones its only offering even as pundits insisted that the company make a cheap feature phone to match the high volume, low profit sales of its competitors.

While more memory initially contributed toward value, in subsequent iOS generations, Apple ran into a new reality: adding more RAM eventually contributes toward reduced battery life, something that had to be factored against the usefulness of having more memory.

Competing devices, particularly tablets, pack on lots of system RAM to run their generic, broadly licensed operating system software. But this has also had a negative impact on their battery life, and subsequently, product satisfaction and sales. Striking the perfect balance between various design goals is much more difficult than just adding more of everything.

Apple's profits allow it to plot out complex, long term development goals

Memory isn't the only feature separating Apple from other vendors. In seeking to differentiate their offerings, Apple's smartphone competitors have packed on easy to implement technology fads like induction charging or NFC, which contribute very little toward value while driving up costs, complexity and unit size.

Apple's profitability gives it the resources to develop expensive and hard to duplicate hardware features, core software technologies and construction methods that are out of the reach of smaller companies operating under narrower profit margins. Apple's cash pile also gives it the ability to make large scale advance purchases, locking down favorable prices and reliable component supplies.

It can also devote significant resources toward solving challenging technical problems. The reason why Apple can ship iOS devices that are responsive and useful despite having much less system RAM than a conventional PC can be attributed toward long term development of a highly integrated mobile operating system optimized to run with minimal resources.

In stark contrast, almost every major new version of Android has been unable to run on the majority of the existing installed base of devices because each new release has required more resources than the last crop of devices included. Google's Android development focus appears to follow short term goals that constantly shift.

While Google and Apple are both chasing money, Apple is successfully implementing a series of long term strategies while Google appears to be running after new objectives each year, and abandoning most of them just as rapidly.

Microsoft appears to be afflicted with the opposite problem. After spending two years porting Windows 8 to ARM, it released its Surface RT as a desktop/mobile hybrid. The result of investing in this long term development effort was a relatively expensive device with the flaws and complexities of a desktop PC packed into the size constraints of a tablet. Its non optimal operating system also eats up much of its storage, rendering it a severely flawed device.

Microsoft's solution is Surface Pro, an even more expensive, more desktop-like hybrid device with even less of the elements that made the iPad an attractive alternative to conventional PCs. Microsoft expended the same type of long term efforts into producing generations of the Zune, with similar results.

Despite very different paths and results, Google and Microsoft both seem motivated by the same reactive desire to beat Apple and get its revenues in one area after another, rather than orchestrating an original long term plan to develop exceptional products that will result in sustainable profitability. As long as its competitors seek to copy its output rather than its formula for success, it appears Apple has nothing to worry about.
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Comments

  • Reply 1 of 188
    That's an awful lot to read into a fairly standard storage bump...
  • Reply 2 of 188

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Euphonious View Post



    That's an awful lot to read into a fairly standard storage bump...


    Agreed.

  • Reply 3 of 188
    blitz1blitz1 Posts: 438member
    C'mon DED, I'm sure you can pump the stock price by another 2% today, just by linking it to a 128GB storage.
  • Reply 4 of 188


    Kasper ! You have changed your slave or what ?

  • Reply 5 of 188
    asciiascii Posts: 5,936member
    The iPad is closing the gap with laptops.
  • Reply 6 of 188


    What happened to innovating to make it tough on the competition?  Oh yea...Jobs is gone...

  • Reply 7 of 188
    irelandireland Posts: 17,798member


    Fat?

  • Reply 8 of 188
    irelandireland Posts: 17,798member

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Euphonious View Post



    That's an awful lot to read into a fairly standard storage bump...


     


    LOL, that's our Daniel. Full blown cult member :D

  • Reply 9 of 188


    "Apple's ability to ship large, consistent volumes..."


     


    That's a large part of how Intel crushed AMD. Though, Apple stumbled some with the latest product introductions. If you have to have ramp-up problems, please do not let them land in a holiday shopping quarter.

  • Reply 10 of 188
    antkm1antkm1 Posts: 1,441member


    What does Dilger mean by "fat" iPad?


    Is the "fat" referring to the bump in storage or the physical size of the device?


    So far, nothing on the Apple Store website showing it as an option.


     


    Maybe he means "phat".

  • Reply 11 of 188
    daharderdaharder Posts: 1,580member
    ... as nice as it is to have a 128gb (on-board) storage option (at a rather exorbitant cost), merely increasing capacity does not fundamentally change the functionality of the iPad.

    Likely the single biggest obstacle for to having such a large amount of storage on an iPad is that iOS still lacks a user accessible file system, so as to easily acess all of those 'CAD files' etc. one might load on all that new space.

    Note: Several competing mobile devices have reached the 128gb storage level already via having 64gb of built-in storage plus (fully OS integrated) 64gb microSDXC/Class 10 cards (often found for around US 50.00) with 128gb microSDXC cards soon to be released.
    ascii wrote: »
    The iPad is closing the gap with laptops.

    Not Really... at least not until it gets a user accessible file system and the abilty to run apps in individual windows etc.
  • Reply 12 of 188
    solipsismxsolipsismx Posts: 19,566member
    lunchy wrote: »
    What happened to innovating to make it tough on the competition?  Oh yea...Jobs is gone...

    Apple is Doomed™¡¡¡
  • Reply 13 of 188
    irelandireland Posts: 17,798member

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Lunchy View Post


    What happened to innovating to make it tough on the competition?  Oh yea...Jobs is gone...



     


    Jesus, man. Give them a break. The iPad (5) is coming out this year and will be everything it would have been under Steve and the iPad mini is the same. We'll see what happens for Apple in the TV space this year. And I'm not talking about the updated FCC Apple TV box, that was a given giving that I expect them to keep the box around when they release their TV, as people update their TV so infrequently. And the Retina MacBook Pros are amazing, and will get better this year. The iMacs are awesome, I just ordered mine. I believe innovation in Cupertino is the same as it ever was. Anntennagate, anyone?


     


    All you have to look at is the gap between the original iPad and the original iPhone: almost 6 years. That's 6 years. iPad was another 3. It's safe to say they are well within their innovation stride to take another 6 months to 2 years to bring out iTV. Especially given the obstacles it faces with regards the complexity of the TV industry and in the old media headstrong ignorance in place. It's still January 2012 as I type this. Patience, please. Let's see what happens this year.

  • Reply 14 of 188
    solipsismxsolipsismx Posts: 19,566member
    antkm1 wrote: »
    So far, nothing on the Apple Store website showing it as an option.

    Goes on sale February 5th.
  • Reply 15 of 188
    Gee, has anyone at AI cared to read this "article"? If the "author" can't, at least someone who edits stuff? Like, you know, an "editor" that speaks and reads the language? This piece is a veritable typo and grammar slip treasure trove. The worst in years, probably.
  • Reply 16 of 188
    wigginwiggin Posts: 2,265member


    Seriously? DED has written some fairly over-the-top, gushing articles before; but I think this one tops them all. Not because of how extreme it is (although it is that, too), but because the entire thing was based on a simple, benign storage bump. And it's written as if that one tiny, little thing signals some shift by Apple or some great new thing that Apple has done.


     


    Congratulations Apple, you have done what your customers have been asking for for at least a few years now. Way to stay ahead of the game. LOL

  • Reply 17 of 188

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Ireland View Post


     


    Jesus, man. Give them a break. The iPad (5) is coming out this year and will be everything it would have been under Steve and the iPad mini is the same. We'll see what happens for Apple in the TV space this year. And I'm not talking about the updated FCC Apple TV box, that was a given giving that I expect them to keep the box around when they release their TV, as people update their TV so infrequently. And the Retina MacBook Pros are amazing, and will get better this year. The iMacs are awesome, I just ordered mine. I believe innovation in Cupertino is the same as it ever was. Anntennagate, anyone?


     


    All you have to look at is the gap between the original iPad and the original iPhone: almost 6 years. That's 6 years. iPad was another 3. It's safe to say they are well within their innovation stride to take another 6 months to 2 years to bring out iTV. Especially given the obstacles it faces with regards the complexity of the TV industry and in the old media headstrong ignorance in place.



    I just feel they're milking their existing OS and hardware platform.  Seems like Apple doesn't have any new ideas besides making the same thing in different sizes/capacities.  I hope I'm wrong and they come out with something new and exciting soon.

  • Reply 18 of 188

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by AppleInsider View Post



    Apple's surprise unveiling of a new "fat" iPad 4 model equipped with 128 gigabytes of storage expands the company's tablet platform offerings into premium territory, a feat its competitors will have trouble duplicating.




     



    Yes, indeed. Very hard to sell a tablet with more SD... No way anyone else can pull it off.


     


    Quote:


    Originally Posted by AppleInsider View Post


     critics have complained that the smaller form factor iPad didn't deliver an sharp enough screen to attract customers


    Critics have actually complained that the smaller form factor iPad doesn't deliver a sharp enough screen, end of story. Adding "to attract consumers" knowing it sold nonetheless is making a baseless point to hide a very real point.

    Stopped reading there, it's obviously a DED piece.

  • Reply 19 of 188
    saareksaarek Posts: 1,523member


    How much bigger is the 128gb iPad, as far as I was aware it was the same size as the other models?


     


    If so why is it being called fat? I've only seen this nickname here so far. 


     


    Colour me confused...

  • Reply 20 of 188

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Lunchy View Post


    I just feel they're milking their existing OS and hardware platform.  Seems like Apple doesn't have any new ideas besides making the same thing in different sizes/capacities.  I hope I'm wrong and they come out with something new and exciting soon.



    Same old post under different names?

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