Economic cargo cults

One thing that never ceases to fascinate me:

Small, thoroughly unremarkable companies try to emulate wildly successful ones by copying some tertiary, sometimes even actively annoying property.

Take Apple and its near-religious obsession with packaging. Their boxes are sturdy, elegant, and engineered with the kind of care normally reserved for spacecraft or Swiss watches.

So naturally, companies selling $9.99 gadgets have concluded that this is the secret sauce. Not the product. Not the ecosystem. Not the brand. No, clearly it’s the box.

What they fail to realize is that I keep an iPhone box because the device inside retains resale value. The packaging is essentially a reusable shipping container with aspirations.

The cheap gadget, on the other hand, has the resale value of an expired, half-eaten sandwich. Its box is therefore not a feature but a long-term storage problem. A nearly indestructible one. I suspect some of these packages will outlive civilization and be excavated by future archaeologists, who will conclude that we worshipped mediocre Bluetooth speakers.

Another favorite is the imitation of Google’s customer interaction model, or rather, the strategic absence of it.

Companies observe that Google doesn’t talk to its customers and infer that this must be part of the winning formula. What they miss is that Google succeeds despite this, not because of it. When you control half the internet, you can afford to be aloof. When you sell niche SaaS to 50 customers in a easily offended corner of Germany, less so.

Yet here we are, with companies proudly offering the full “Google experience”: no support, no accountability, and a contact form that disappears into a small, silent void, presumably to be studied later by theoretical physicists.

It’s a bit like copying the table manners of a king while lacking both the kingdom and the food.

I suppose this is the corporate equivalent of a cargo cult: build the runway, light the torches, and hope that success will land.

Do you see those as well?

@masek one thing I really hate with a passion is the trend of tiny magnets in the product's packaging, only there to deliver a one-time "smooth" box opening experience. Making the package harder to recycle and adding unnecessary waste of precious magnets.

@hzulla @masek
I also hate stupid magnets on the product!
See Apple connectors or Kobo Sage (loads of magnets to hold a power cover that no-one buys and doesn't work).

Actually Apple is also a fashion cult. All products are priced at what the market will bear, but Apple hype allows often twice the price. Or some feature that is actually pointless.

There is also an unhealthy obsession with thinness and lack of sockets on all tech, but worst on Apple.
Bring back HDMI, 3.5mm jack, SIM & SD card.

@raymaccarthy @hzulla Apple is a very interesting company. Their level of vertical integration is nothing short of a marvel.

I agree there is a cultist component part of the company.

On the other hand, I always knew beforehand what I get at what price. It is the big tech company with the smallest amount of disappointment.

@masek @raymaccarthy @hzulla

Vertical integration is a base requirement for any company intending to stay in business over time. It doesn't mean to execute in all areas all the time, just being able to do so is a huge plus. But it's one not really showing up as needed in localized, short term view, leading to outsourcing and finally loosing.