Article Rating: |
||
| October 21, 2009 12:14 PM EDT | Reads: |
2,948 |
I've been ruminating the past few days on why Apple is doing so well with it's pricey high-end products and services during a recession. The answer came as I was reading today's New York Times column by Thomas Friedman, whom I deeply admire and read anything and everything he puts out.
Friedman points out that the winners in today's fast-shifting U.S. job market are the ones demonstrating "entrepreneurship, innovation and creativity." He says, "They are the new untouchables," in contrast to other still highly educated but less creative types.
Friedman cites Harvard University labor expert Lawrence Katz, who explains in the column that the now disadvantaged are "those engineers and programmers working on more routine tasks and not actively engaged in developing new ideas or recombining existing technologies or thinking about what new customers want. ... They’ve been much more exposed to global competitors that make them easily substitutable.”
In contrast, it's the "top half" of the labor pool, and more specifically the apparent 10 percent that are "entrepreneurship, innovation and creativity"-focused among them, that know to succeed and win they need the very best computer and associated services, even if it costs $500 more. Nowadays there's no better way to gain an advantage in business and life than to have the best technology.
The people who are succeeding are buying Macs, iPhones, iPod Touches and Apple's services and applications. A flight to quality is usually spurred by disruption and uncertainty. It's not about brand religion or pretty graphics. It's about survival and success when the going gets tough. It works for me, it has to.
A chef doesn't buy the cheapest knifes. A painter doesn't buy the cheapest brushes. A carpenter doesn't buy the cheapest hammer. And all the winners in the economy today -- those that have a say in what they use to do all the digital things so critical now to almost any knowledge- and services-based job -- need the best tools. And they will upgrade those tools just as fast as they can (hence the rapid adoption of Apple's Snow Leopard OS X upgrade in recent months.)
So for all those millions of newly laid off workers who know that "entrepreneurship, innovation and creativity" is their only ticket to a new, fresh start -- those that no longer have an IT department to tell them what to do (at lowest cost) -- they seem to be making a new move to a Mac. I expect they won't soon go back, once they taste the fruits of heightened knowledge productivity.
Because when failure is not an option, you have to have the best tools, especially when the going gets tough. The sad part is that Apple does so well when so many are not.
Published October 21, 2009 Reads 2,948
Copyright © 2009 SYS-CON Media, Inc. — All Rights Reserved.
Syndicated stories and blog feeds, all rights reserved by the author.
- Ubuntu-based Open Source Linux Mint Tests KDE Version
- NetArt Chooses Open-Xchange to Enter into Cloud Application Business
- Rackspace Starts the Great OpenStack Migration
- Cloud Expo: Architect Full Performance Potential of IaaS Cloud Services
- Hot Tech Firms at the 2012 DoDIIS Conference
- Dell and Morphlabs Partner on SSD Cloud
- Microsoft Sets Up an Open Source Subsidiary
- Piston to Integrate Cloud Foundry & OpenStack
- Dell Buys Mainframe Modernizer in Cloud Push
- Informatica Upgrades Its iPaaS
- Inktank to Commercialize Ceph Big Storage
- Video Streaming Outside The Firewall Market Shares, Strategies, and Forecasts, Worldwide, 2012 to 2018
- Red Hat Executive Appointed to Technology Services Industry Association (TSIA) Support Services Advisory Board
- Ubuntu-based Open Source Linux Mint Tests KDE Version
- What Kind of Software Company Should You Work For?
- NetArt Chooses Open-Xchange to Enter into Cloud Application Business
- Rackspace Starts the Great OpenStack Migration
- TeamDrive 3.0 Unveiled at CeBIT: Brings Enterprise-Grade Security to Cloud File Sharing on the iPhone, iPad and Android
- Cloud Expo: Architect Full Performance Potential of IaaS Cloud Services
- Sorting Through the APM Clutter
- Hot Tech Firms at the 2012 DoDIIS Conference
- Swisscom Floats Red Hat Cloud
- Dell and Morphlabs Partner on SSD Cloud
- Microsoft Sets Up an Open Source Subsidiary
- The i-Technology Right Stuff
- Linux.SYS-CON.com Exclusive: Linus Discloses *Real* Fathers of Linux
- After Ubuntu, Windows Looks Increasingly Bad, Increasingly Archaic, Increasingly Unfriendly
- A Closer Look at Damn Small Linux
- Linus' Top Ten SCO Barbs
- SCO CEO Posts Open Letter to the Open Source Community
- Netscape Co-Founder's 12 Reasons for Growth of Open Source
- Where Are RIA Technologies Headed in 2008?
- *POINT - COUNTERPOINT SPECIAL* What's Wrong with the Open Source Community?
- Introducing "Cooperative Linux" - Linux for Windows, No Less
- Linux.SYS-CON.com Exclusive: What Would UserLinux Look Like?
- Why Recovering a Deleted Ext3 File Is Difficult . . .






















