Former Apple retail chief Ahrendts says 'mission accomplished,' denies reported criticisms...

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  • Reply 41 of 57
    stanhopestanhope Posts: 160member
    She was horrible!  Mission Accomplished?  Didn’t a president say the same thing?  It was no more true then than now.  The only accomplished mission is getting rid of her.
    kestralGeorgeBMac
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  • Reply 42 of 57
    canukstormcanukstorm Posts: 2,784member
    "What Apple ought be doing is solidifying their existing products, not continuing to diversify."

    A company of Apple's size and with the amount of resources that they have, they should be doing both.
    edited May 2019
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  • Reply 43 of 57
    canukstormcanukstorm Posts: 2,784member
    dysamoria said:
    My recent free iPhone 6s battery replacement (five months ago?) was without problem. I did feel confused about where I was supposed to be and what the employee roles were, but there was no problem in my visit. The guy who handled me was straight-forward and wasn’t even “Apple employee creepy” (I find heavily-scripted employees to be heavily creepy).

    What actually changed? Did the tech people get moved to/hidden in the back room where the on-sight work is done, leaving the employees in the main room acts as a buffer between customers and tech people?

    What has changed that you think Apple are going back to what you consider high-quality roots?
    "What has changed that you think Apple are going back to what you consider high-quality roots?"

    It's too early to tell.  The new SVP hasn't had much time to make any significant changes.
    GeorgeBMac
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  • Reply 44 of 57
    dysamoriadysamoria Posts: 3,430member

    Apple stores were always the envy of design and making gobs of cash years before she joined Apple. There were very minor tweaks made under her watch, and were obviously a product of collecting data. No community environment was ever accomplished, the stores are sterile and don’t feel inviting or convey a sense of community in any way. She was basically an image and did nothing noticeable.
    This is exactly how I perceive it. The stores were, and still are, sterile and uninviting. Huge open spaces, lack of color (except on marketing materials), bright flat lighting, high ceilings with poor sound treatment, etc., is never an inviting environment. It’s like a replay of the brutalist architecture fad of the 70s, only the orange and brown wallpaper and carpeting has been replaced with a glossy coat of glass and plastic. It’s still retro-futurism without the humanity factor. The design thinking stopped at surface appearances (an endemic problem at Apple since 2013).

    I see that changes were made, but I can’t say they made things notably better or worse. The corporate culture is the real problem: When Apple chose the mindless (and debunked) “open” office fad, they applied it to the stores, eliminating the Genius Bar and any other sense of “this space is for [purpose]”.

    The corporate culture of today’s Apple seems to be riding on the coattails of the reputation earned by pre-2013 Apple. The arrogance is still there, but the expertise is lacking. Fads and shallow surface features matter more than functional design and purpose. People who did well before, who are still there today, seem lost in their obsessions, which are not being regulated by the singular vision the company lost when its real leadership went away.

    I don’t labor under the delusion that Steve Jobs was a wonderful human being. I suspect Tim Cool is a kinder corporatist. His leadership and vision, however, is a sterile and generic Wall Street/MBA-type mentality. At this point, Tim Cook’s social ethics are the only thing I like about his Apple. And then [sigh] on comments forums, I have to slog through rants by people who have chips on their shoulders over the suggestion that being kind to other human beings needs a bit of policy to promote it; where they’re constantly posting about how Tim Cook’s social ethos is what’s wrong with today’s Apple. It’s a little hell of its own to be here. I’m actually surprised there has been little ad hominem commentary on this thread, so good work everyone.

    Back to the store itself: The only change I can tell in Apple stores is an increase in the preexisting “where am I supposed to go and who am I supposed to talk to?” confusion, which was already an issue before. The real changes I’ve noticed in Apple are the greatly increased number bugs in iOS (and the failure to address them, revision after revision after revision, over more than SIX YEARS), and the obsession with a design fetish that has eclipsed and obstructed functionality.
    kestral
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  • Reply 45 of 57
    dysamoriadysamoria Posts: 3,430member
    lkrupp said:
     Your Marxism is showing. 
    Your libertarianism is showing.
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  • Reply 46 of 57
    dysamoriadysamoria Posts: 3,430member
    sflocal said:
    Damn... she is not aging well.
    Aaaand there it is.

    Thank you for fulfilling my negative expectations of the men who comment here.
    JustSomeGuy1
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  • Reply 47 of 57
    dysamoriadysamoria Posts: 3,430member
    stanhope said:
    She was horrible!  Mission Accomplished?  Didn’t a president say the same thing?  It was no more true then than now.  The only accomplished mission is getting rid of her.
    What was horrible about her? I sincerely want to know. I also want to know how you know. 
     0Likes 0Dislikes 0Informatives
  • Reply 48 of 57
    dysamoriadysamoria Posts: 3,430member
    "What has changed that you think Apple are going back to what you consider high-quality roots?"

    It's too early to tell.  The new SVP hasn't had much time to make any significant changes.
    Agreed. That’s why I’m asking this of those who think everything is back on track just because this specific executive is gone. 
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  • Reply 49 of 57
    LordeHawklordehawk Posts: 168member
    I don’t blame her for not looking at outside data, she had mountains of inside data and reviews that are more accurate.  A company can better quantify improvements with their own verifiable data collected over decades.

    The reality is that consumers expect a great purchase/service experience but if anything goes wrong, complaints and bad reviews.  I imagine many bad Apple store visits a result of user error, being an idiot, or not in warranty.  

    The stores are great, I love them.
    edited May 2019
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  • Reply 50 of 57
    canukstormcanukstorm Posts: 2,784member
    dysamoria said:

    This is exactly how I perceive it. The stores were, and still are, sterile and uninviting. Huge open spaces, lack of color (except on marketing materials), bright flat lighting, high ceilings with poor sound treatment, etc., is never an inviting environment. It’s like a replay of the brutalist architecture fad of the 70s, only the orange and brown wallpaper and carpeting has been replaced with a glossy coat of glass and plastic. It’s still retro-futurism without the humanity factor. The design thinking stopped at surface appearances (an endemic problem at Apple since 2013).

    I see that changes were made, but I can’t say they made things notably better or worse. The corporate culture is the real problem: When Apple chose the mindless (and debunked) “open” office fad, they applied it to the stores, eliminating the Genius Bar and any other sense of “this space is for [purpose]”.

    The corporate culture of today’s Apple seems to be riding on the coattails of the reputation earned by pre-2013 Apple. The arrogance is still there, but the expertise is lacking. Fads and shallow surface features matter more than functional design and purpose. People who did well before, who are still there today, seem lost in their obsessions, which are not being regulated by the singular vision the company lost when its real leadership went away.

    I don’t labor under the delusion that Steve Jobs was a wonderful human being. I suspect Tim Cool is a kinder corporatist. His leadership and vision, however, is a sterile and generic Wall Street/MBA-type mentality. At this point, Tim Cook’s social ethics are the only thing I like about his Apple. And then [sigh] on comments forums, I have to slog through rants by people who have chips on their shoulders over the suggestion that being kind to other human beings needs a bit of policy to promote it; where they’re constantly posting about how Tim Cook’s social ethos is what’s wrong with today’s Apple. It’s a little hell of its own to be here. I’m actually surprised there has been little ad hominem commentary on this thread, so good work everyone.

    Back to the store itself: The only change I can tell in Apple stores is an increase in the preexisting “where am I supposed to go and who am I supposed to talk to?” confusion, which was already an issue before. The real changes I’ve noticed in Apple are the greatly increased number bugs in iOS (and the failure to address them, revision after revision after revision, over more than SIX YEARS), and the obsession with a design fetish that has eclipsed and obstructed functionality.
    "I suspect Tim Cool is a kinder corporatist. His leadership and vision, however, is a sterile and generic Wall Street/MBA-type mentality."

    Bingo. Which is to say he doesn't have much vision at all.
    kestral
     1Like 0Dislikes 0Informatives
  • Reply 51 of 57
    GeorgeBMacgeorgebmac Posts: 11,421member
    dysamoria said:
    What have Apple changed since she left that you characterize as “on the right path”?
    A de-emphasis in selling product and re-emphasis on people and service.  Thus they tapped the head of HR / "People" to lead it -- which hopefully signals a return to qualified, well trained staff.   
     0Likes 0Dislikes 0Informatives
  • Reply 52 of 57
    dysamoriadysamoria Posts: 3,430member
    A de-emphasis in selling product and re-emphasis on people and service.  Thus they tapped the head of HR / "People" to lead it -- which hopefully signals a return to qualified, well trained staff.   
    HR is about people as commodity. That’s what it is in every business and institution I’ve ever worked for. I haven’t worked for Apple, but they’re not known to be great at the Apple store employee level. 
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  • Reply 53 of 57
    canukstormcanukstorm Posts: 2,784member
    dysamoria said:
    HR is about people as commodity. That’s what it is in every business and institution I’ve ever worked for. I haven’t worked for Apple, but they’re not known to be great at the Apple store employee level. 
    From what I understand, that wasn't the case when Ron Johnson was running the Retail operations
    kestralGeorgeBMac
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  • Reply 54 of 57
    kestralkestral Posts: 311member
    To quote Austin Powers, "That's a not a woman, that's a man, baby!"
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  • Reply 55 of 57
    kestralkestral Posts: 311member
    “My biggest accomplishment was getting live trees into the stores.”
    All the malls were doing that in the 80s.
    GeorgeBMac
     1Like 0Dislikes 0Informatives
  • Reply 56 of 57
    GeorgeBMacgeorgebmac Posts: 11,421member
    dysamoria said:
    HR is about people as commodity. That’s what it is in every business and institution I’ve ever worked for. I haven’t worked for Apple, but they’re not known to be great at the Apple store employee level. 
    That's probably why Apple doesn't call it "HR".   Her former role was VP of People.  It is likely a take-off on how highly Steve valued the "A Players" as the core and meat of his business.  He knew that the future of his company depended on those highly competent, highly motivated people.   So, Apple never went down the road of "humans as resources" (like they were commodities) -- well, not until Ahrendts recruited the bouncy salesy types full of fake pride in Apple and chased away the A players or hid them away in the back room.

    I worked for an Apple like company and the Jobs-like executives who founded it and ran it were clear and loud about one thing:   The most important person in the company was that first-iine employee who picked up the phone when the customer called -- the whole reputation of the company rested on that person.  It was true then and it is true now -- although, as you point out, most corporations do it the opposite.
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