Opinion: Apple is not innovating enough (2024)

Evan Leong, Scot Scoop EditorFebruary 17, 2022

Steve Jobs presents the iPhone 4: a massive advance in terms of iPhone design. Not much has changed since Jobs passed away.

Apple co-founder Steve Jobs once declared his company’s slogan as “Think Different.” However, that motto seems to have washed away in the last decade.

Fast Company, an online publication that focuses on business and technology, ranked Apple as the most innovative company in 2011. In 2021, Apple did not even make the list. Under Tim Cook, Apple has only made incremental improvements and tiny breakthroughs in the tech market.

From Steve Jobs’s return to power in 1997 to his death in 2011, Apple was at the top of the world in terms of innovation. They first innovated the iMac, which returned them to relevance after declining for years. In 2001, Apple released the iPod, creating a massive disruption in the digital audio player business. The iPod could store far more songs than any other digital MP3 player and presented an appealing and effortless interface.

Apple proceeded to innovate more than ever in the late 2000s. Apple created the iPhone in 2007, which was the first smartphone and a significant upgrade from previous handheld devices. People then realized how far ahead the iPhone was compared to other phones, and its use became widespread across the world. Apple then released the iPad in 2010, another innovation that became commonplace in households everywhere.

All of this restructuring allowed Apple to go from rapid declining to emerging as one of the most profitable companies in the world. Today, Apple products can be found everywhere, and billions of people own Apple products because of this upheaval.

Timeline of Apple's Innovation 1997-2011
In 2011, Steve Jobs passed away, and Tim Cook succeeded him as Apple’s chief executive officer; ever since, Apple has innovated very little and has resorted to making incremental improvements to products that already exist.

The most prominent example of incremental innovation is the iPhone in almost all of its aspects. Apple’s iOS 14 software update adds minor improvements to existing functions, but nothing new or worth talking about.

The hardware is not much better. Phones are getting bigger, and cameras are annexed. Occasionally, there is a significant improvement, like removing the home button to add a bigger display screen, but these massive improvements are sporadic.

Even the device’s design, something Apple is widely known for, has made very few changes. iPhones succeeding the iPhone 5 looked pretty similar until the iPhone X came out. The phones that came after the iPhone X look quite identical to the iPhone X.

Although newer iPhones tend to last longer, people also do not see a need to upgrade because they don’t see the need to buy technology with no new features. As a result, people are buying iPhones less than ever.

I use an iPhone 6s, widely considered old and outdated, but it operates on the latest IOS and works perfectly fine. I do not see a need to upgrade because the newer phones do not have any significant technological advances that the iPhone 6s doesn’t have.

Opinion: Apple is not innovating enough (2)

According to Business of Apps, Apple’s iPhone and iPad sales have been relatively stagnant. From 2015 to 2020, Apple’s iPhone sales declined by 14%. This stagnation comes from Apple’s complacency and competition from smartphone companies like Huawei.

Even though Apple has only been making incremental improvements to existing products, they still occasionally dabble into innovation. Their most significant creations are the Apple Watch and the Apple Airpods. However, these innovations are becoming quite rare, and it is not enough to compete against other tech companies.

Other companies are catching up with Apple in terms of innovation. Samsung is one of Apple’s biggest rivals, and it has not slowed in terms of inventing. Unlike Apple, Samsung created a folding smartphone, a massive advance in smartphone technology. Samsung also has power sharing, which gives Samsung phones the ability to charge other Samsung phones or earbuds.

As a matter of fact, Samsung was able to innovate features like water resistance and fingerprint scanning far before Apple could. It seems like Apple is playing catch-up in smartphone innovation, and eventually, they will be left in the dust.

Complacency is the enemy of success, and Apple has indulged in plenty of complacencies under Tim Cook’s leadership. They have gone from disrupting the tech market to incremental improvements to already established products. Eventually, their slow and steady decline will catch up to them as other tech companies surpass them.

About the Contributor

Opinion: Apple is not innovating enough (3)

Evan Leong, Scot Scoop Editor

Evan Leong is a senior at Carlmont High School, and this is his third year in journalism. He is excited to continue his journalism journey as an editor for Scot Scoop while exploring new ideas and writing topics. Outside of school, he enjoys playing violin, chess, basketball, and hanging out with friends. View his portfolio here.Twitter: @eLeong21

Opinion: Apple is not innovating enough (2024)

FAQs

Why does Apple lack innovation? ›

The company's incremental upgrades, lack of AI progress, and an antitrust lawsuit are a toxic combination for Apple's most important product. It wasn't long ago that smartphone users had plenty of reasons to upgrade after two years. Smartphones were getting significantly better each year.

Is Apple really that innovative? ›

Apple is well-known for its innovations in hardware, software, and services. Thanks to them, it grew from some 8,000 employees and $7 billion in revenue in 1997, the year Steve Jobs returned, to 137,000 employees and $260 billion in revenue in 2019.

Is Apple creative and innovative enough? ›

MacDailyNews Take: Yes, Apple is not as innovative as it was under Steve Jobs who even started the company's work on Apple Watch and Apple Vision Pro, but the company — thanks to Jobs and Cook's subsequent management of iterations of products and services conceived during Jobs' tenure — now has more than enough money ...

What is Apple's view on innovation? ›

Steve Jobs was a strong believer in the power of design to create products that people would love. He also believed that innovation was the key to staying ahead of the competition. Under Jobs' leadership, Apple began to focus on developing new products that were innovative, beautiful, and easy to use.

Has Apple stopped innovating? ›

Looking back at its predecessors, most of them have also been incremental upgrades. Despite that, Apple continues to claim it's innovating, when in reality it has been just polishing its devices to provide a more reliable and powerful experience.

How can Apple improve their innovation? ›

Balance structure and flexibility. For Apple, churning out great innovations is a question of balancing structure and flexibility. On the one hand, a large company like Apple needs to work to fixed deadlines, and needs a degree of stability and predictability when it comes to developing new products and services.

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