Antes iPod que sencilla
by Tomy Pelluz on enero 29, 2008
When the iPod first came out, it was written off as a failure-to-be because it didn’t offer various features. It was a choice-limited product and therefore it couldn’t possibly succeed in a market that was all about choice. Rob Glaser, CEO of RealNetworks, even used its choice-limited characteristics as an argument to predict its downfall “five years” later. Funny, that: it’s five years later, and iPods have just passed 100 million sales.
The biggest mistake many technology companies make, whether they’re hardware– or software-oriented, is thinking that consumers want choice, because choice equals freedom. However, what consumers want is satisfaction, and as explained above, too much choice leads to less satisfaction.
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