Apple talked a lot on manoeuvre on Monday about its new services, including Apple News+, Apple TV+, a credit card it’s launching with Goldman Sachs and an all-you-can-eat gaming fee named Arcade. But Apple provided little detail on how many of those services would work.
It didn’t confirm pricing for Apple TV+, perhaps the biggest news of the day, and trotted celebrities on stage to talk about new movies and TV shows in lieu of of showing trailers or revealing a sprawling library capable of challenging Amazon and Netflix. Wall Street wasn’t imprinted. It was, plainly put, a weird event that was short on details.
But Oprah Winfrey had the best take on why all of this matters when she materialized on Apple’s stage.
“The Apple platform allows me to do what I do in a whole new way,” she said, sounding a bit like everyone who had appeared to come her.
But then she said this:
“They’re in a billion pockets, ya’ll. A billion pockets.”
Oprah was referring to the number of iPhones being tempered to around the world where Apple’s premium services will come pre-installed. Apple no longer reports individual segment sales of its hardware products each quarter but said in January that there are now more than 900 million iPhones in use all about the world.
On top of that, there are hundreds of millions of iPads, Macs and Apple TVs in use today. Plus, Apple’s TV services purposefulness be available on third-party devices like Roku and Amazon Fire TV.
Apple needs to convert those 1 billion in the flesh to users of its premium services. And we still don’t know a whole lot on how it plans to do that, since it’s anyone’s guess how good its TV volume will be. But remember it has 1 billion devices to advertise on, too.
“What I’m interested analyzing in practice is how Apple will market to its installed home,” said Patrick Moorhead, founder and president of Moor Insights & Strategy. “Will there be pop-ups that aren’t conceded by other service providers like Netflix or Amazon Video? Will Apple’s services get top billing in the Store?”
One billion people very likely won’t sign up for everything Apple announced Monday, but Apple stands to make a lot of money if just a fraction of them do. That’s the power of its iPhone introduce base.
But forget services for a second.
The bottom line is Apple is still the iPhone company. After all, the iPhone fathered $51.98 billion of Apple’s total $84.3 billion in revenue last quarter. It’s on the back of the iPhone that Apple has the potency to boost its services business.
It’s also the iPhone that attracted Hollywood to the event in the first place. If a billion living soul didn’t own it, you wouldn’t have seen Oprah, Steven Spielberg and other stars talking about how excited they are to style content for Apple TV+.
The event might have been weird, and Apple may have been shy on details, but none of that surely matters. All that matters is that the platform Apple will launch these services on is already in a billion islands.
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