Apple
iPhone is officially 15. It was cooler when it was a baby
The early days, when the iphone was new, were special.
15 years ago, Steve Jobs and Apple engineered what could best be described as a
hype beast of a product launch.
First, Jobs unveiled the iPhone at Macworld in January 2007, but
it would be months before the iPhone would officially launch. Whether by design
or necessity, that delay turned out to be the best possible way to launch what
would become a technological and cultural touchstone.
Anticipation for availability details and the official launch
date built and built until Apple announced and, naturally, the tech media
reported it.
Hype central turned out to
be the one-year-old Apple Flagship Store on Fifth Ave. While I remember launch
day, I don’t recall attending or even walking by. However, reports from the
time described a line that literally ran down the front steps of the store and
snaked around the block. There was media, and third-party companies trying to
ride this cresting wave of excitement. It was pandemonium.
The
old-fashioned way
Apple generated all this without the benefit of social media.
Facebook was just a couple of years old and mostly only college students used
it. Twitter hadn’t caught on with the general public. There was no Instagram.
This was all built on traditional media hype and word of mouth.
Apple leaned into it, hard. There were store employees acting as
cheerleaders, leading people in chants of “When I say ‘I,’ you say, ‘iPhone.’”
The scenes of people waiting all night
Why?
Apple and Jobs had spent the last eight years building brand
devotion that some might argue surpassed the concurrent quality of their
products. I don’t see it that way. There’s never been a company, tech or
otherwise, that managed to pair exquisite design and industry-leading quality
and utility with a brand affinity that built into something approaching a cult.
As one guy told The New York Times in 2007
The
devotion was born out of products like the imac, and ipod. Steve Jobs
was the glue that bound it all together. It was hard to find an Apple fanatic
who wasn’t as devoted to Jobs as he was to his iPod.
Devotion
and repetition
After that first launch, I became a regular at the yearly launch events, which eventually moved from the Summer to September or October. For a while, the hype machine continued unabated. At the iPhone 6s launch, I remember meeting one of the first eager iPhone recipients
Still, by then the tenor of the events had shifted. Yes, there
were still lines, but they were often filled with professional line waiters who
would buy the phones for other people and those who were buying for resale.
Pre-orders, home delivery, and at-home activation all became commonplace – and
easier than waiting outside an Apple store.
The lines were starting to shrink, but Apple’s team of hypers
was growing and getting bolder.
After the Lithuanian woman brought her new, still-boxed phone
outside, they demanded she unbox it for the crowd. She complied and seemed
excited, but I thought it was a little forced.
professional Team Apple
cheerleaders who created a gauntlet for new iPhone owners to run through.
15 years on, Apple’s iPhone is still an excellent smartphone,
clearly a leader in its field, but the hype bubble Apple and Steve Jobs
nurtured and grew is visibly deflated. We still love the devices and buy them
by the millions, but that cultural moment is gone.
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