Lessons from the iPhone: Ten Years Later

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When it comes to resistance to embracing new technology, I’ve heard it all – from, “I built this business on relationships,” to “My clients never ask me for that technology.” Whatever your reason for your reproach – hubris, fear, unfamiliarity – technology is going to radically change your business. It matters little how you feel about it. Change is inevitable, and firms that approach it rationally and adapt to technology will have the best chance to successfully serve the next generations of clients.

Consider the iPhone. One shouldn’t make statements like this lightly, but the iPhone, introduced to us merely 10 years ago, changed the world. When Steve Jobs unveiled the iPhone in January 2007, he cleverly introduced it as “three revolutionary products” – a phone, iPod and a miniature computer in one. Reactions were swift and mostly cynical. Steve Ballmer couldn’t help but laugh. Jim Balsillie, then-co-CEO of the maker of BlackBerry was dismissive, calling it, “one more entrant into an already very busy space with lots of choice for consumers.”

How did these capable and otherwise successful executives, and other “experts,” get it so spectacularly wrong? What was it about the iPhone that left its competition in the dust while inspiring many imitators? Was it the touch-screen? Was it the high-resolution camera? The music player?

What most people missed was that the iPhone was built on an entirely new paradigm. It was not an incremental, linear extension of an existing technology. Rather, it created a wholly new genre that didn’t exist before its launch.

Looking back just a few years prior, the jump from the traditional landline phone to the early cell phone was easy enough to understand. It was a phone. A portable, untethered communication device that made our lives immensely easier, but it was still just a phone. Landline to mobile. The step was linear and incremental.

Then came BlackBerry. It was a cell phone, but it was also an internet device that sent and received emails. It made grown men and women look like teenagers gleefully texting their friends, thumbs pumping on their “Crackberry” devices. It had a huge impact on how we conducted our daily business. Some might even describe it as life-altering. But the progression from the conventional cell phone to BlackBerry was, again, linear and incremental.