How Did Apple's Supply Chain Fare During the iPhone 3G Rollout?

Everyone has got an opinion on the new iPhone's functionalities, but how did Apple's physical and digital supply chain perform on Friday? The physical side held up well, but the digital side did not.

CONNECTIONS
Apple
AMR Research
Nokia
Mon, July 14, 2008CIO Everyone and their brother has got an opinion about the new Apple 3G iPhone (faster? yes! battery life? booo!), but how did Apple's behind-the-scenes supply chain systems and processes fare during the much hyped rollout last week?

According to news accounts of frantic Friday, there were enough of the ultracool devices in the Apple stores, which means Apple's physical supply chain processes (manufacturing, inventory and logistics) worked well. In fact, Apple reported on Monday, July 14, that it had sold 1 million iPhones by Sunday. (By comparison, it took 74 days to sell 1 million of the original iPhones).

(Update on July 15: Media outlets are reporting that as of Tuesday morning, all three iPhone 3G models had sold out in 21 states. This news comes from a retired public relations man named Jim Neal who discovered, using iPhone's availability widget, that 117 of the 188 Apple stores in the U.S. had sold out of all three of the new iPhone models.)

But it appears that the digital supply chain side of Apple's house was unable to withstand the barrage of activation demands (through the iTunes site) that stormed in from 21 countries. Many frustrated customers had to wait varying lengths of time on Friday to get their new iPhones up and running. "The iTunes software appeared to have been so overwhelmed by demand today that customers were not able to go through that final stage and sync their iPhones," said AT&T spokesman Mark Siegel. (So far, Apple has not commented on the problems and did not return a message from CIO to talk about its supply chain.)

"To me, the physical supply chain is working just fine," says Kevin O'Marah, the chief strategy officer at AMR Research. "But the pioneering position they have taken in the digital supply chain is showing how tough it is to compete in this new realm."

In AMR Research's 2008 "Supply Chain Top 25" list, Apple took home the top spot, besting Nokia, Dell, Procter & Gamble, IBM, Wal-Mart and others, due to "an intoxicating mix of brilliant industrial design, transcendent software interfaces and consumable goods that are purely digital," noted the report's authors, who included O'Marah. "The mechanical and financial benefits of this approach include extremely high inventory turns, minimal material or capacity limitations to growth, and excellent margins." (For more on what those top 25 companies do, see "Apple, Nokia, Dell Tops Among Global Supply Chains.")

O'Marah says he was surprised that it was the digital side of Apple's operations that encountered difficulties. Apple's physical supply chain operations have a "checkered past," says O'Marah, though that has recently changed.

But it appears to O'Marah that Apple's digital supply-chain strategy, which he applauds for its infinite scalability and zero-marginal cost, may have "bottlenecked" on Friday. "Who would have even thought that was possible?" he asks.

The Future Supply Chain

In the AMR "Supply Chain Top 25" report, the analysts noted that while Apple could have stumbled in meeting the demand for the original iPhone in 2007, it did not. "Behind-the-scenes moves like tying up essential components well in advance and upgrading basic information systems have enabled Apple to handle the demands of its rabid fan base without having to fall back on their forgiveness for mistakes," notes the AMR report. (See "Fraud and Theft Risks in Global Supply Chains Are Everywhere" and "How ConAgra's Pot Pie Recall Bakes In Hard Lessons for Supply Chain Management" for more on today's top supply chain issues.)

Even with the technical problems and mild customer frustrations on Friday, O'Marah doesn't think there's cause for alarm at Apple. "No one's chucking their iPhone," he says.

"You can look at that and say, 'Shame on them for not thinking this through,'" O'Marah says. "But a fairer observation is: Good job to Apple for mastering the physical supply chain so well that you have this high-profile launch and your problems are not on the physical side—you have product in stock. So, you've done it. And yet what you're doing is so successful in putting this product out there, that the pressure ends up falling back on the content side of the business. Which is kind of amazing."


Loading...
Applications MarketSpace
Service Level Reporting and Communication
Service level reporting is the most visible output and often the most time-consuming activity in SLM. Learn more »
Lower IT Costs with Oracle Database 11g Release 2
Learn how upgrading to Oracle Database 11g Release 2 can transform your business, budgets, and service levels Learn more »
Managing Your SAP System
Learn how to more effectively manage your SAP system. Learn more »
 
SPONSORED LINKS
 

White Paper: 4 Customer Service Myths

White Paper: Improve Agility with Operational Responsiveness

Removing the Barriers to IT Governance: How On-Demand Software Changes the Game

Cloud Computing--Latest Buzzword or a Glimpse of the Future?

A Balanced Approach to an Application Development Platform

Adobe® LiveCycle®solutions for intuitive user experience

10 Ways Excel Drives More Value from Your SAP Investment

What's New in SOA Suite 11g?

Unleash the Power of Java with Oracle JRockit Real Time

SOA Best Practices and Design Patterns

Application Grid: Ideal Platform for IT Consolidation

Ready to virtualize tier one applications? Check your virtualization maturity.

Learn how to provide complete Business Service Management.

Increase ROI of Your Application Portfolio

See how AT&T can help protect your network.

Top Five CIO Challenges

Streamline IT Costs. Boost Performance with WAN Optimization.

Want to know how you can maximize employee productivity?

Build your 1st app FREE with Force.com

TDWI checklist helps define data readiness for analytics. Download report.

A new fleet of PCs with a total ROI in 10 months. Find your ROI.

eZine: A Roadmap to Reducing IT Complexity

Reduce risk, gain agility. See how Progress can help your business.

Virtualization Technology as a Business Solution

eZine: A Roadmap to Reducing IT Complexity

White Paper: Managed Security for a Not-So-Secure World

SharePoint - Unchecked growth of content is unsustainable.

Focus Under Pressure: Why IT Governance Becomes Mission-Critical in a Down Economy

Should Your Email Live In The Cloud? A Comparative Cost Analysis

Adobe® LiveCycle® solutions for business process automation

Architecting Business Intelligence Applications for Change: The Open Solution

Increase UPS efficiency without sacrificing protection.

Unlocking the Mainframe: Modernizing Legacy System to SOA

State of the Data Integration Market

Enhance Customer Loyalty through Higher Responsiveness

Achieving Business Agility with Application Grid

Seven Ways ITIL Can Help You in an Economic Downturn

Four steps to populate your CMDB.

"Enterprise-Proven" is the Prerequisite for Enterprise SaaS Portal Solutions

Join us at the US-Brazil IT-BPO Summit, on November 10th in New York.

Unified Communications: Thoughts, Strategies and Predictions. Join the discussion

Read the RSA report: Security for Business Innovation

Webcast: Looking to the Cloud for Email and Collaboration Services

64-page prescriptive guide to security, compliance, and IT operations.

Keep your IT expertise up to date. Join the Intel Premier IT Professionals.

A Clear View Toward Virtualization

Virtualization Technology as a Business Solution

The rules of infrastructure management just changed.

A Clear View Toward Virtualization

Interactive Q&A helps you discover key ways to maximize IT assets.

 
 
RESOURCE CENTER