Apple Is a Software Company

  • Share
  • Read Later

Ben Bajarin is the Director of Consumer Technology Analysis and Research at Creative Strategies, Inc, a technology industry analysis and market intelligence firm located in Silicon Valley.

From the outside looking in, this article’s title may sound crazy. As crazy as it sounds, I believe it’s true. I’ll go into greater depth about why, but before I do, I want to acknowledge the role of hardware for a software company.

Without question, software needs hardware. Therefore, any software company has to prioritize hardware. Most companies in the market, however, are either a hardware or a software company. Rarely are they both.

Apple happens to make both hardware and software, but I would argue that, internally, they think like a software company. If that’s the case, then why do they make hardware? I believe there are two reasons.

(MORE: Why Competing with Apple Is So Difficult)

First of all, they believe that their software is the cream of the crop. And cream of the crop software belongs on cream of the crop hardware. Apple creates and designs their own hardware because they don’t believe that anyone else in the world can create hardware worthy of their software.

The hardware to Apple is simply the aesthetically-pleasing package that allows consumers to experience their software and services. The design of the hardware is absolutely an important part of the overall Apple experience.

We are visually-driven human beings, therefore we are attracted to things that are attractive. Apple understands this and has set such a high bar for how they want their products to be experienced that it’s necessary for them to create the entire experience from beginning to end.

Elegantly designed hardware without software, however, is simply an elegantly designed paperweight. Software is what makes hardware useful. It’s for this reason that I’m convinced Apple thinks more like a software company than a hardware company.

(MORE: There Is No Tablet Market: Why Consumer Experiences Matter)

Five of the top 10 technology companies in the world are purely software companies. Apple, of course, is the top technology company in the world, followed by Microsoft, IBM, Google and Oracle. This again underscores my point that software is what makes hardware useful.

When Apple looks forward and envisions how to make products that add value to people’s lives, I believe they start with a vision of software and services, then work backwards to create amazing hardware to bring their software vision to life.

Apple is unique in this regard because they are what we call vertically integrated, meaning they own or control the critical parts of the value chain in order to bring their products to market.

(MORE: Amazon Services, Not Pricing, Is Why the Kindle Fire Is Disruptive)

Apple makes a lot of money on hardware. That’s a fact. They are in the minority in that regard, but it’s because they make their own software that they can affectively differentiate their products, allowing them to make more money on hardware than competitors. The point that they are a software company is underscored by the latest announcement of the new iPhone 4S.

There are plenty of good reasons they didn’t completely change the new iPhone’s industrial design, and they’ll probably no longer change the industrial design of the iPhone or iPad every single year: reasons like manufacturing, engineering, and economies of scale.

I would argue, though, that iOS 5 is truly the more exciting Apple development in relation to the mobile industry. As I said at the beginning, software is what makes these devices come alive. The design is simply the shell that lets us access that usefulness in a tangible way.

Apple designs elegant and attractive shells that appeal to our visual and tactile senses. Their software, however, is what makes these elegant and attractive devices so hard to live without.

MORE: Apple Will Still Be Apple, Even Without Steve Jobs

Ben Bajarin is the Director of Consumer Technology Analysis and Research at Creative Strategies, Inc, a technology industry analysis and market intelligence firm located in Silicon Valley.