Author: THE Insider
It's almost impossible to go out and buy a plain old mobile phone anymore. We threw tons of features/capabilities on them. We changed them from utilitarian to dress accessories...statements of who we are and our importance. But it took the guy on Infinity Circle to really change the keypad and screen. Oh sure the iPhone is sleek and incorporates so many service capabilities (wonder why your cellphone bill got HUGE?). But to us it's just a phone...can I make a call on it...can I reach the person...can I hear the person on the other end?
Neat thing is that all of Steve Job's offerings -- even those that stumble -- will all work together in his version of the "open world." It will be great not because of the cool looking hardware but because the OS, apps, HW are tuned to work together like people seem to want them to work.

Coming Your Way – There almost seems to be no stopping mobile communications devices taking over nearly all of your away from home entertainment and more. The hardware, software, content and provider communities are determined to get you…one way or another. Source – C-2 Pictures
Maybe because our kids attended the same high school as Jobs and Woz they can’t imagine things as barbaric as communications using dial-up modems.
They laugh when they see the photos of the Motorola brick.
The idea that they would have to search out a pay phone or wait to call someone until they can use the home phone seems … ridiculous.
Especially when they have their flip and slider phone in their pocket.
The cellphone for millions has gone beyond being trendy. It is a necessity – a means of staying in touch with friends and family, added safety and security.
Growth came rapidly because people could stay in touch on the go:

Figure 1 - Insatiable Demand – cellphones have become very personal communications/entertainment devices. In nearly every household you’ll find multiple mobile devices ranging from simple cellphones for boomers and beyond to everything in one device with Gen Xers and Yers. Source – IDC
Of course a lot of folks wanted more. Heck…they wanted it all.

Figure 2 - Beyond the Call – Digital content and communications across the lines are replacing calls as major profit centers for communications services. Texting, IMing, games, photo exchange and similar activities are rapidly becoming a more popular way for folks to communication, sometimes in the same room. Source – Yankee Group
Naturally a lot of companies as well as service and content providers were all too willing to give consumers what they wanted.
Conventional wisdom engineers were determined to pack every feature, every capability and every service into the small devices …regardless of the cost to useability, financial outlay.

Figure 3 - Beyond the Phone – To some it still looks like an innocent cellphone but to device/service providers the new all-in-one devices look like big dollars. In many instances the calling service charges are dwarfed by the “other” services. Source – NY Times
Their research showed folks were ready for it…all:
The consumer desire was there but people looked at the units and mumbled one of Kate Brewster’s (Claire Danes) observations – “You’re a mess.” or “I hate machines.”
They bought the devices and signed up for the services but they weren’t happy!
So Jobs looked around his Cupertino office and saw more than array of pretty good (proprietary but pretty good) computer software. What did he have:
He also had something every CEO and head of marketing would give almost anything for…a growing band of happy followers.
Followers who sometimes seem to believe Arnold’s robotic statement when he said “…the leader of the worldwide resistance and last hope for mankind.”
The iPhone set the stage for usage.

Like No Other – In pretty typical fashion, Apple and Jobs didn’t do much market testing in the design/development of the iPhone. They just wanted something different. The result – darn it – was another solid hit for a company that integrates a walled garden OS with applications they are only now opening to more providers/suppliers…we’ll see. Source – Apple
Either with the iPhone or a much cheaper also ran, people started giving up the calls (hard to believe it when you drive down the road but…) and began making use of their mobile devices and demanding more…just more!

Figure 4 - Form, Function – Apple and its first partner, AT&T, were quick to show consumers all the slick, easy added things they could do with their iPhone. Things like surfing, music player, email searching and more … oh yes and call. Even with the hefty initial price, people bought into the program. They are still practicing it. Source – iSuppli
Suddenly mobile phone penetration caught and in some areas surpassed Internet access. For example:
And the application demand ($$$) just seems to keep expanding:

Figure 5 - Growing Sales – Smartphones and multimedia phones open the door for volume added sales/service opportunities, including very targeted ads. The potential just seems to grow. Source – Nokia
There are a lot of iPhone clones being introduced by virtually every device manufacturer.
Consumers like the new attention. The new awareness from the suppliers.
Content owners, service providers and device manufacturers want alternatives from Microsoft, Symbian, heck they’re even looking at Google’s gPhone initiative.
The key consumer iPhone purchasing motivation is that it is lot like T3’s Skynet…“It was software; in cyberspace. There was no system core; it could not be shutdown.”
Of course for all of Steve’s sleek work, 33% of iPhone owners carry another phone…to make a call!
Folks will simply have to upgrade to the next gen 3G iPhone to make calls.
The iPhone seems to be used more as a PDA/computing/entertainment device.
Owners like it for reading email, surfing the web, listening to music, connecting to the Internet, checking calendars.
Video is still a work in progress.

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