> I think if Apple launched a "budget" phone it would destroy much of the Android market. Maybe it would damage their brand though, who knows.
So long as they maintained quality their brand would be fine, but their profits would take a serious beating. To compete with low to mid range Android phones they'd have to seriously cut prices and margins on their low end devices. This means the low end devices would be better value than the higher end devices, sucking sales and therefore profits from them.
Apple simply doesn't need higher market share. It already has a much more dynamic and valuable app platform and media ecosystem. What Apple does need is a high market share in terms of paid apps and services. These are where the actual value of a platform come from.
Right now if you want the best apps and services, you buy Apple. If that changes, then they'll have a problem. However large volume sales of cheap Android phones that only ever run the pre-installed apps are simply not a threat in this regard. The market share platform argument against Apple only works if all those Android phones are actually being used as app and service platforms. If they're not, then they're irrelevant.
There will always be a contingent of sophisticated customers that will prefer Android, or even Windows phones. Those people will continue to buy flagship Android devices, and there's really nothing Apple can do that will change that. This is fine, and it's not a threat to anybody. Large scale sales of low end Android phones similarly isn't a threat to Apple. For now Apple is quite happy doing what it has always done, or tried to do. It's taken control of the high end of the market, making vast amounts of money and doubling down on quality and user experience. They're not a threat to high end Android phones, they're not a threat to low end Android phones, and those phones are not a threat to them. They're in competition, sure, and neither 'side' can afford to slip up.
Steve Job said many years ago that Apple and it's customers had to give up the notion that for Apple to win Microsoft had to loose. It's like than here. For Apple to win, Android does not have to lose. The problem with Apple adopting a low-profit scorched earth, market share first policy against Android is that it would only leave scorched earth left, and that's no basis for growing a strong business.
>Right now if you want the best apps and services, you buy Apple.
This argument is about 3 or 4 years stale and needs to stop IMHO. What at all will you call a best app today that will drive someone to buy an Iphone instead of say, android because an equivalent one or even the same app isn't available at the Play Store?
Yes, there are a lot of poor apps in the Play store but I can find similar ones on iTunes. Again there are a lot of great apps in the App Store but I find them at the Play Store as well.
So long as they maintained quality their brand would be fine, but their profits would take a serious beating. To compete with low to mid range Android phones they'd have to seriously cut prices and margins on their low end devices. This means the low end devices would be better value than the higher end devices, sucking sales and therefore profits from them.
Apple simply doesn't need higher market share. It already has a much more dynamic and valuable app platform and media ecosystem. What Apple does need is a high market share in terms of paid apps and services. These are where the actual value of a platform come from.
Right now if you want the best apps and services, you buy Apple. If that changes, then they'll have a problem. However large volume sales of cheap Android phones that only ever run the pre-installed apps are simply not a threat in this regard. The market share platform argument against Apple only works if all those Android phones are actually being used as app and service platforms. If they're not, then they're irrelevant.
There will always be a contingent of sophisticated customers that will prefer Android, or even Windows phones. Those people will continue to buy flagship Android devices, and there's really nothing Apple can do that will change that. This is fine, and it's not a threat to anybody. Large scale sales of low end Android phones similarly isn't a threat to Apple. For now Apple is quite happy doing what it has always done, or tried to do. It's taken control of the high end of the market, making vast amounts of money and doubling down on quality and user experience. They're not a threat to high end Android phones, they're not a threat to low end Android phones, and those phones are not a threat to them. They're in competition, sure, and neither 'side' can afford to slip up.
Steve Job said many years ago that Apple and it's customers had to give up the notion that for Apple to win Microsoft had to loose. It's like than here. For Apple to win, Android does not have to lose. The problem with Apple adopting a low-profit scorched earth, market share first policy against Android is that it would only leave scorched earth left, and that's no basis for growing a strong business.