Competitions

CAT Prep

Upskill

Placements

MBA Co'26

RTI Response

Rankings

Score Vs. %ile

Salaries

Campus Tour

How Apple Gives us Emotional Reasons to Buy

Apr 21, 2015 | 5 minutes |

Join InsideIIM GOLD

Webinars & Workshops

Compare B-Schools

Free CAT Course

Take Free Mock Tests

Upskill With AltUni

CAT Study Planner

1 Day to CAT 2024 (All the best)

Participants: 513

Final 2 Days to CAT 2024 Test-44

Participants: 528

Final 3 Days to CAT 2024 Test-43

Participants: 396

Final 4 Days to CAT 2024 Test-42

Participants: 401

Final 5 Days to CAT 2024 Test-41

Participants: 406

Final 6 Days to CAT 2024 Test-40

Participants: 378

Final 7 Days to CAT 2024 Test-39

Participants: 366

Final 8 Days to CAT 2024 Test-38

Participants: 330

Final 9 Days to CAT 2024 Test-37

Participants: 337

Final 10 Days to CAT 2024 Test-36

Participants: 301

Final 11 Days to CAT 2024 Test-35

Participants: 574

Final 12 Days to CAT 2024 Test-34

Participants: 341

Final 13 Days to CAT 2024 Test-33

Participants: 304

Final 14 Days to CAT 2024 Test-32

Participants: 287

Final 15 Days to CAT 2024 Test-31

Participants: 391

Final 16 Days to CAT 2024 Test-30

Participants: 311

Final 17 Days to CAT 2024 Test-29

Participants: 316

Final 18 Days to CAT 2024 Test-28

Participants: 354

Final 19 Days to CAT 2024 Test-26

Participants: 341

Final 20 Days to CAT 2024 Test-26

Participants: 312

Final 21 Days to CAT 2024 Test-25

Participants: 260

Final 22 Days to CAT 2024 Test-24

Participants: 275

Final 23 Days to CAT 2024 Test-23

Participants: 186

Final 24 Days to CAT 2024 Test-22

Participants: 232

Final 25 Days to CAT 2024 Test-21

Participants: 233

Final 26 Days to CAT 2024 Test-20

Participants: 292

Final 27 Days to CAT 2024 Test-19

Participants: 241

Final 28 Days to CAT 2024 Test-18

Participants: 241

Final 29 Days to CAT 2024 Test-17

Participants: 260

Final 30 Days to CAT 2024 Test-16

Participants: 315

In his fourth Founding Fuel episode, Rajesh Srivastava says that chasing profits may be self-defeating. It does not guarantee the kind of success earned by the likes of Apple, Google, Amazon, Facebook or Twitter - companies that have notched up profitable revenue growth over an extended period of time and have also won a place in the hearts of the people they serve. This twin achievement has catapulted them into the league of the world's most admired and valuable companies. (All episodes of this series on InsideIIM can be found here)     He says and we quote : "Let me pluck Apple from the list. Before I share my insight into the Apple Way, let me ask you, what do you think is Apple's stated purpose? Maximizing profit? Maximizing return on investment (ROI) for its shareholders? My guess is most of you would tick both boxes. It may surprise you to know that although Apple's financial numbers exhibit robust health, the pursuit of reckless profit is not its raison d'être. In Apple's chief executive Tim Cook's words, as quoted in the Financial Times: "In creating these great products we focus on enriching people's lives - a higher cause for the product...not just making money. Making money might be a by-product, but it's not our North Star... we do things for other reasons than a profit motive … I don't think about the bloody ROI." Cook went on to issue a stern warning to people who disagreed with this style of thinking, "… if that’s a hard line for you ... then you should get out of the stock." Apple resolutely believes that it exists not for profit motive nor for maximizing ROI. These financial metrics are merely a by-product of pursing a bigger purpose: to enrich people's lives by providing them with a memorable experience through its ever expanding range of products - iPod, iPad, iPhone, MacBook and other devices. For starters, it did not begin by saying that Instead, it stands up to bullying by activist investors and Wall Street, and is prodigiously focused on ensuring that the customers' interest - that is, enriching their lives by giving them a memorable experience - is at the heart of all its decision. Apple products are merely vehicles it has in its armoury to achieve this objective. This unique thinking be captured in a simple business model. I have decided to label it the Inside – Outside Way of Thinking.

If you look at this simple diagram, the inner circle represents why the company exists—to enrich customer’s lives. The outermost circle represents what the company does. The middle circle is the bridge through which the company's 'inside and outside' goals are linked. Because customers feel their interests are protected, above the company's interest, every time and at all cost, they reciprocate in equal measure by offering their business to Apple, without it having to seek it. Now take Apple’s competitors. They too are respected and admired global companies. Do they follow a different style of thinking while launching new products? Take for instance the smartwatch. Many companies have entered this nascent market in the past few years, with little success. How would their thinking have differed from Apple's? Maybe they thought This style of thinking, as per the model shared above, represents an Outside - Inside Way of Thinking. What  happened to the products that were launched based on this thinking? Most brands, including Samsung Gear, have been launched, re-launched, re-re-launched multiple times. And yet they have not gained satisfactory traction in the market. Whereas Apple Watch, scheduled for an April 2015 launch, already has customers salivating for it. It is estimated that Apple will ship 15 million watches in the first phase of the launch itself. Why? Because customers are convinced that Apple, true to its tradition, will protect their interest ahead of their profit and take decisions that will "enrich their lives by providing them with a memorable experience." That's how successful businesses think. They exhibit an Inside - Outside thinking approach. Do you want customers to salivate for your products? Then reverse your style of thinking and start thinking from the customers' point of view: Once you have answered these two questions, go ahead and introduce the product. And watch customers queuing up for your product. This is a one-way street. If you transgress this law, you will have to beg your customers to try your product."   (Reproduced with permission from Founding Fuel Publishing Pvt Ltd. This episode is part of a special weekly show The New Rules of Business, hosted by business strategist Rajesh Srivastava for Founding Fuel, a new generation digital media and learning platform for the entrepreneurial community. Rajesh has a related column with every episode, which can be accessed here)