poofyhairguy
Lifer
- Nov 20, 2005
- 14,612
- 318
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It was never meant to be "the cheap phone."
You are right and wrong.
I mean everything you said about the 5C's market position as it was is 100% correct. But what is missing is the truth that the 5C had a mission it never got to see through because the lineup was ended- the creation of a new column on your chart for the developing world. Part of the long-term plan for the 5C starting this year probably was for it to be the first low-end " affordable " iPhone. Apple was determined to keep margins at a certain level all the way down the price tiers, so the 5C and its successors were supposed to scrape the absolute bottom of the market to get more marketshare. Until the 5C Apple couldn't dream of keeping normal margins in a $200 off contract phone because all its "cheap" phones were former flagships made of metal.
Because the 5C failed in the market compared to expectations Apple scrapped that plan and basically gave up any hope of having majority marketshare vs Android. In that time the developing world decided it could save up and buy an iPhone flagship as an aspirational product, so a C series and dealing with low-end customers was no longer needed. Margin is a percentage so selling a more expensive product is always better!
The end result is an Apple that has gone full luxury brand and reaps the profits from that. Meanwhile Android goes commodity with a price race to the bottom and only the Apple (and somewhat Samsung) brand can still command flagship pricing. Part of today's success was the failure of the 5C, when Apple learned it's better to just put out the best it can do every year and that's all.
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