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- <text id=92TT2169>
- <title>
- Oct. 05, 1992: Byting Japan
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Oct. 05, 1992 LYING:Everybody's Doin' It (Honest)
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- TECHNOLOGY, Page 68
- Byting Japan
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Apple Computer shows how to crack the world's toughest
- consumer-electronics market
- </p>
- <p>By EDWARD W. DESMOND/TOKYO
- </p>
- <p> Executives at Apple Computer's Japanese subsidiary are
- still laughing about the time a shipping-company employee drove
- up in a refrigeration truck to pick up crates filled with
- Macintosh computers. He had seen the company's rainbow-hued
- apple logo on the boxes and assumed they contained fresh
- produce. The irony was fitting: in the first few years after the
- 1983 entry of Apple into Japan's $7 billion personal-computer
- market, its Macintoshes, unsold, were gathering dust on the
- shelves of computer shops in Japan.
- </p>
- <p> If Apple staff members in Japan can laugh today, it is
- because the company has succeeded in dramatically reversing its
- fortunes there during the past four years. Since 1989 Apple has
- increased its market share in Japan nearly fivefold, to 5.4%,
- selling 120,000 machines in 1991. That is still small compared
- with giant NEC, which controls more than 50% of the
- personal-computer market in the country, but Apple hopes to
- reach a 7% share and sell 50% more computers this year, for $500
- million. Maneuvering its way among behemoths like NEC, Fujitsu,
- IBM and Toshiba is no mean achievement for Apple, especially
- since overall personal-computer sales have slumped during the
- past two years. Says Satjiv Chahil, marketing vice president for
- Apple Pacific: "I think we have won Japan's respect."
- </p>
- <p> In the process, Apple (worldwide sales: $6.3 billion) has
- joined a select group of American companies that have debunked
- the myth of Japan as a fortress impenetrable to outside
- products. But cracking the Japanese market has had deeper
- significance for the California-based company: with profit
- margins steadily shrinking in the personal-computer business,
- CEO John Sculley has set out to expand Apple's business into
- advanced consumer electronics like CD-ROM players and personal
- digital assistants (PDAs), far more powerful versions of the
- electronic pocket diaries developed by Japan's Casio and Sharp.
- Sculley believes Apple has a key advantage because it pioneered
- software that makes computers simple and fun to use.
- </p>
- <p> Sculley's vision enticed electronics giants Toshiba and
- Sharp to form alliances with his company earlier this year.
- Apple is contributing software know-how and product design to
- manufacture a CD-ROM player with Toshiba and a PDA with Sharp;
- the Japanese firms are providing manufacturing expertise along
- with key components such as flat-screen displays. Says Sculley:
- "We cannot afford to fund these projects by ourselves. These
- alliances give us a chance to be players in an important growth
- area." Agrees Toshiba's Takehiko Kotoh: "In the 100-m race,
- Apple is the top runner. They are very quick to move, and they
- are very open about what they are doing."
- </p>
- <p> No one in Japan would have spoken so flatteringly of the
- U.S. firm four years ago, when Apple was doing nothing right in
- that market. The company had priced its best-selling equipment
- too expensively -- a Macintosh Plus at $2,842 in 1989 had a tag
- more than 60% higher than the U.S. price. Apple left marketing
- and distribution exclusively to a subsidiary of Canon, which saw
- little point in exerting itself on behalf of a lazy American
- client. Worst of all, Apple had not taught its computers to
- speak Japanese. In early 1989 only six software programs were
- available in Japanese, and a computer without software is about
- as useful as a phonograph without records.
- </p>
- <p> But a change in attitude was beginning to take shape. In
- 1988 Sculley decided to take the Japanese market seriously.
- Seeking to address the software problem, Apple sponsored forums
- of Japanese and American software makers to encourage
- cooperation. The strategy worked: today about 500
- Japanese-language programs exist for Macintosh, and several
- Japanese-language magazines for Apple enthusiasts are being
- published by local software companies. Access in Japanese to
- Apple's highly regarded software in graphics, desktop publishing
- and music writing established the company as a leader among
- designers, artists and small publishers, as well as among a
- surprisingly large number of big companies keen to improve the
- look of their internal publications. Says Takefumo Kanoya,
- general manager of the Japan Personal Computer Software
- Laboratory: "Apple has its own culture, the Mac culture, which
- is the key to its success. It has finally come to Japan."
- </p>
- <p> In relatively short order, Apple Japan hired a Japanese
- management team, appointed a local board of directors, listed
- its shares on the Tokyo stock exchange and dropped its prices
- to competitive levels -- all meant to demonstrate a long-term
- commitment to Japan. Most important, Apple took charge of its
- own marketing and advertising. An award-winning Apple television
- commercial shows a bemused young businessman's face as he asks
- himself, "In love with my work? What happened to me?" Apple
- Computer is the answer, of course.
- </p>
- <p> The whimsical ad campaign contrasted Apple with the
- dark-suited imagery preferred by the likes of NEC. Apple also
- went after youthful consumers by backing a 1990 Janet Jackson
- concert in Tokyo and a Japanese Ladies' Pro Golf Association
- tournament last month, the first time a major corporation has
- ever sponsored a Japanese women's tourney. Says Chahil: "We are
- championing causes. Besides, women are becoming more important
- in professional life. If women vote for Mac, maybe the next
- generation will too."
- </p>
- <p> What the next generation does will depend largely on
- Apple's next generation of high-powered "information
- appliances," which will reach the market in 1993. Sculley is a
- leading advocate for the view that the high-tech world is on the
- verge of another revolution spurred by stunning advances in
- miniaturization, data storage, digitization of information and
- telecommunications.
- </p>
- <p> The company's premier product for the new age is the
- Newton, a PDA produced in cooperation with Sharp, unveiled in
- May for release early next year. The Newton fits in the palm of
- the hand and employs a touch screen rather than a keyboard;
- entries like appointments or notes can be handwritten on the
- screen with a stylus. Newton has a slot for credit-card-size
- memory and program cards, like guidebooks or maps, and can make
- wireless data transmissions by fax.
- </p>
- <p> Apple's CD-ROM joint venture with Toshiba is focused
- through Kaleida, a subsidiary at work creating an operating
- system that will make the disks playable on a variety of
- computers. The CD-ROM can hold digitized text, still images and
- even video as well as audio. Its main appeal is that it can
- accommodate data equivalent to that carried by 1,000 regular
- computer disks or about 250,000 pages of text. At this point,
- fewer than 5% of personal computers are equipped with CD-ROM
- players because no standard exists: a CD-ROM for Apple, for
- example, does not run on an IBM machine and vice-versa. As a
- result, the industry is paralyzed; book publishers have made few
- titles available on CD-ROM, and computer manufacturers have
- shied away from pushing CD-ROM players.
- </p>
- <p> Sculley hopes that Kaleida will overcome the problem. In
- late July, at an industry conference that Apple sponsored at
- Hakone, a mountain resort near Tokyo, he announced that starting
- next year his company will build CD-ROM players into most of
- its computers at cost to stir consumer interest. Says Chuck
- Goto, general manager of S.G. Warburg Securities in Tokyo: "The
- new technology is ready, but so far, no one has shown the
- imagination to figure out a product consumers want. Apple is
- trying to build the critical mass." If the company succeeds, it
- will be blazing an impressive trail -- similar to the one it has
- cut by building a base in Japan.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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