
It's all part of the "playing hard to get" strategy, which involves artificial creation of scarcity plus an absence of information plus routine overpricing by 20% to 50% on everything we sell. It's all designed to make people want our stuff even more and so far it's working like a charm. (For a discussion of the "Obama Maneuver," see here.) At the retail end we reinforce this by having sales clerks called "geniuses" who are just a wee bit snooty and condescending and cooler than you'll ever be, and who are trained to give you this look that says, You know, I'm not sure if you're cool enough to buy this product, so let me go check with my manager and see if we can sell to you. (We hired Franz-Josef Leckmichamarsch, the guy who did the training at Barneys, and he's done a remarkable job for us.)
Also, as some blogger points out here, in a masterstroke of retail genius we've done away with cash registers and replaced them with little handheld devices that all the clerks carry. Yes, this slows things down, because nobody is actually dedicated to the task of just ringing up sales. And yes, this confuses customers and sends them bouncing around the store looking for some clerk who isn't already working with a customer. But it maximizes the productivity of the clerks, who before this were often just hanging around doing nothing while the check-out counter losers were backed up. By distributing the load of ringing up sales among all the clerks, we can cut our store staffing by up to 20% on average.
Better yet, we also increase the amount of time each customer spends in the store. Which means we sell more stuff because while they're waiting they see other things they should buy. Best of all, because it's now a little bit more difficult to make a purchase in our stores, frigtards view our stuff as even more special and unique, and they want it even more. Buying from us isn't just a matter of walking into the store, choosing a product and paying. With us, your purchase is an adventure. A hero's journey. And everyone's journey is different, and unique, and special. You must overcome obstacles, and wait for long periods of time, and figure which clerk is going to free up first. It's kind of like a videogame. People love it. We're getting huge positives in our focus group testing, and in the 40-question surveys we're requiring everyone to fill out before they are allowed to complete their transaction.
Tuesday, July 10, 2007
We're trying to make our retail experience a little more annoying
Posted by
Steve
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6:45 AM
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23 comments:
Geniuses™
Whaow!
"It's like an adventure".
LOL
Emad =P
Apple stores still have cash registers. They also have hand-held swipers for when the lines at the registers get out of hand, recognizing that most people are just buying something really small.
The Geniuses I've dealt with have all been very friendly. I think the idea of them looking down at you snootily is just something people who hate Apple assume.
Also, Geniuses don't sell things. They fix things. Regular "Mac Specialists" sell things.
Apple's success at retail can be ascribed to the same thing as their success at computers, music, and phones: they just get it.
More of what users need, less of what they don't, and all without being so damned irritating. They get it.
Woah, the german in "Leck mich am Arsch" is right on the spot.
Didn't know FSJ has german roots (or at least someone who lectures his posts)...
where did the franz-josef leckmichamarsch ("lickmyass") come from?
Leckmichamarsch
:)))
ich lach mich schlapp, ganz grosses kino :-)
Leckmichamarsch
literal translation: lick-at-my-ass
i.e. kiss-my-butt
FSJ a german? - Come to think of it, the greatest german idiot (though not genius) was Franz-Josef Strauss, i.e. FJS.
Get it? FSJ vs. FJS
Matt
Congrats. You've succeeded. They are definitely annoying now.
a hero's adventure, eh? been boning up on your robert bly, joseph campbell and ken wilbur a bit lately?
if this is your strategy, i also recommend a moat filled with molten lava around the front of the store and that you make customers take off shoes at the front, making it seem all japanese tea garden-like, only to then be faced with shards of broken glass and lego™ pieces all over the floor between them and the nearest apple clerk with one of those hand-held check-out devices.
my friend who works as a clerk at your bev center store in l.a. must curse the day he ever donned the corporate t-shirt & jeans.
My friend decided he wanted an iPhone and asked me where he could get one (seriously, it's for him, not me), and I called up the local Apple store to see if they had any. Chick on the phone says, "No way, buddy, we're sold out." Yeah, the chick totally buddied me. It was ridiculous. So we called the AT&T store and they had a whole bunch of them.
You know, the last time I was at the Apple store, I thought it was funny hat day, until I realized that all the frigtarded geniuses think they're so cool that they can pull off Jamaican beanies, leather ball caps, and porkpies 'n shit.
Seriously, fSteve, these are the people that you want to keep out of your stores. Vibe is not in effect.
Lick my ass is from Mozart. Get some culture!
Steve Jobs, I curse thee!!!
My two cents.
I've made two visits to the SouthPark Charlotte Apple Store recently. The first on the Monday following release to get an iPhone. The second the following Saturday to return a headset and purchase some software.
1. iPhones aplenty in both sizes. No problem buying a pair.
2. Loads of accessories.
3. Plenty of helpful, friendly staff in spite of the extraordinary crowd (it was actually a little hard to move around the store).
4. Line on Monday was five deep when I arrived, and five additional customers jumped right in behind me. There were three registers running (yes, they have manned checkout stations). Within five minutes, a clerk pulled me out of line and checked me out with his handheld.
5. Line on Saturday was three deep, and I stood for about three minutes to make my return. Even without my receipt (which had been emailed, thanks much), my return was processed sans difficulty while my toddler and her Mom played Dr. Seuss' ABC on an iMac. Five minutes later, I got back in line to buy the game, and was pulled out almost immediately buy a floorwalker wielding a handheld. He rang me up, swiped my card, and I was gone (oh, and did I mentioned how very convenient it is that they email me the receipt?).
My last trip before that was in San Francisco. A friend needed his MacBook's top case replaced, and I needed to reinstall my OS (it doesn't bear explaining why). I had no appointment, but the Genius fit me in at the same time as my friend. She replaced his cracked and discolored top case on site within a few minutes, while I was netbooted to their store server reinstalling OS X. My repair of a defective iMac about a year ago was handled with similar aplomb in Charlotte.
Apple's stores have routinely provided me with truly excellent service. The worst problem I've ever encountered has been the crowds. I think it sucks that Nima had trouble with his visit, but one person doesn't make a trend.
I've had good experiences at apple stores. People fail to realize that Apple is shifting a cultural paradigm. With great change comes great suffering.
Actually Goethe said it (wirklich). That's make it a literary quote (for real).
Never Mind the faggy bags the stores use...
FSJ is right! The "genius" bar is even better designed for piss you off and unless you've made a preschedule appointment at 7AM in the morning to come in by 4PM you'll never get served.
FSJ is right! The "genius" bar is even better designed for piss you off and unless you've made a preschedule appointment at 7AM in the morning to come in by 4PM you'll never get served.
Hey Steve-o, if you want to go all feckin' Teutonic, try Lufthansa, which stands for Let Us Feck The Hostess And Not Say Anything. Achtung, baby!
But the whole thing falls apart for those of us who have a corporate discount. We have to stand there cooling our heels while the perplexed sales person looks for the black binder, looks up our company name, finds the appropriate bar code, looks at our company ID, tries to figure out how to enter the discount, calls over a supervisor, who enters the discount, and then we can proceed.
How about little icons in the handhelds or on the screens with our company logos and the discount, FSteve? Instead of this early 90s experience?
This is exactly the experience I had in the Austin, TX store.
Where the heck did you find that pic.
Actually, Leck mich am arsch is a quote from the mighty, the supreme Goethe, author of "Faust" and "The Sorrows of Young Werther" and a highly respected scientist who made great discoveries in the fields of geology, plant morphology, and the optics of color, among others.
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