May 6, 2008 4:00 AM PDT

A bridge to the future of the iPod

What does Apple CEO Steve Jobs have in mind for the next generation of iPods?

(Credit: Ina Fried/CNET News.com)

More than six years into the iPod era, Apple still stands atop the music player landscape. But what comes next?

Apple is at a crossroads in the evolution of the product that arguably saved its bacon. Without the iPod fueling Apple's profits and investments, we probably wouldn't have spent the past year talking about Apple's surging Mac business or its game-changing iPhone.

After years of double-digit gains, iPod growth has finally trailed off. The market is arguably saturated: do you know anyone who wants to take their music on the go who hasn't bought an MP3 player? But at the same time, the iPod is undergoing a bit of a revolution: it's morphing from a simple music player to a full-fledged computer.

Apple has sent clear signals that it thinks the iPod Touch and the iPhone are the future of its iPod business. It considers the Wi-Fi-enabled iPod Touch "a new type of device," Greg Joswiak, Apple's vice president of worldwide iPod and iPhone marketing, said when Apple unveiled a higher capacity iPod Touch in February.

But that doesn't mean the whole world is ready to step up to a more sophisticated device like the iPod Touch: lots of people just want to play their tunes and watch their shows on the go, and don't want to break the bank to do so. While Apple is taking sure steps toward evolving the upper echelon of its iPod product line, what should it do to keep its iPod cash cow going into the next decade?

Look to the clouds. IaaS (iPod as a service) will thankfully never catch on as a buzzword, but Apple could bridge the gap between today and the future by bundling regular iPods with services, adding wireless as fast as possible, and bringing OS X down into a new generation of iPods as soon as Moore's Law lets it happen.

Coming back to earth
At some point last year, iPod growth began to slow. Year-over-year unit growth dropped from 50 percent during the 2006 holiday season to just 5 percent growth during the 2007 holiday season. But revenue growth remained steady, at 18 percent during the 2006 holiday season and 17 percent during the same period in 2007.

That suggests that people are making the jump from older iPods to newer models, a trend backed up by our recent iPod survey. The iPod Classic (defined as any generation of video-playing iPod) is the day-to-day music player for 31 percent of respondents. Fifty-two percent of all respondents have owned one or two iPods, and 34 percent bought their first model in 2003 or 2004.

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But 60 percent of same respondents indicated that the iPod Touch would be their next iPod purchase. And 68 percent said given their choice of possible music player/cell phone combinations, they most want the iPhone. This kind of "trading up" to the starting price of $299 for an 8GB iPod Touch--or the $499 32GB model--helps Apple offset the slow growth of the basic iPod models with stronger revenue and profits from the iPod Touch while it adds a whole new source of cash with the iPhone.

Both the iPod Touch and the iPhone are much more than just music and video players: they can get online, send e-mail, and will soon be able to run a host of officially sanctioned games and applications.

As chips continue to get smaller, more powerful, and cheaper, it stands to reason that Apple could beef up the other versions of the iPod, the Shuffle and the Nano, with additional capabilities and features. Certainly, it will be able to keep increasing the amount of storage available on each device, the single largest request of MP3 player shoppers who responded to our poll. Wi-Fi capability was the second-most desired trait in a future iPod.

The iPod Touch may be the Next Big Thing for Apple's iPod business, but it won't be the only iPod of the future.

(Credit: CNET Networks)

At some point, the MP3 player market looks like it will diverge into at least three businesses: a low-end commodity business cranking out tiny standalone audio and video players for very specific tastes, the high-end portable computing business, and some third category that packs as many computing features of the iPod Touch that can fit, at the time, within $50 of a $199 price band.

This three-headed monster appears some ways off. At the moment, there doesn't appear to be any competitor making meaningful gains at Apple's expense, even in the low-end market. That suggests people are still buying their MP3 players based on design, brand identity, and the need for more storage.

If that changes, however, Apple probably doesn't want to spend a lot of effort on a low-margin commodity business. The iPod brand is easily the strongest in the portable music player world, but as the low-end of the market spreads out into countless niches (think USB drives), Apple would have no real advantage over other consumer electronics companies that know how to crank out widgets in huge volumes.

Also, basic mobile phones are growing more and more capable of handling simple music playback, said Ross Rubin, an analyst with The NPD Group. And at some point, the ability of manufacturers to add more and more capacity will outpace the growth of the average individual's personal music library, he said.

The iPhone and the iPod Touch are the kind of innovative high-margin products that Apple likes to have. In a crowded marketplace, you need to find some way to differentiate yourself, and Apple has traditionally focused on making high-end products with great design that are easy to use.

At your service
Something is going to have to fit in between the commoditized MP3 players you might find one day in Walgreens or 7-Eleven and the iPod Touch. As Apple waits for the advances in chip technology needed to bring larger screens, more capacity, and wireless capabilities into power-constrained devices, it can start offering services to increase the attractiveness of lower-priced iPods, Rubin said.

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Just a combined 13 percent of our survey respondents said they are considering an iPod Shuffle or an iPod Nano for their next iPod purchase. It's great for Apple that so many people want the iPod Touch, but that's leaving an awful lot of people on the sidelines who want a music player but can't justify spending $299. One thing the company could do is finally drop its long-standing opposition to a subscription model and start selling iPods in conjunction with such a service, Rubin said.

Apple has long maintained that people want to buy music, rather than rent it. However, that might not always be the case, as people are starting to get used to the idea of "cloud computing," where much of your data is stored by a third party.

And as more and more people buy iPods for video as well as music, such a subscription service makes more sense. Apple is now offering TV and movie rentals through iTunes, and could extend some sort of similar packaging to music if the demand was there. I think most of us have made enough hasty music purchases, only to grow sick of that song or album after a week, to consider a try-before-you-buy type of service from Apple.

Apple has a bit of a luxury in this area that it doesn't have in the Mac or iPhone market, in that it enjoys a dominant position from which to make its next move. The company seems to be in a similar position to when it introduced the iPod Nano, killing off its most popular product in the process. It had a killer design with the Nano, but had to make the tough decision to abandon its best-selling product.

Now, with the iPod Touch and the iPhone, Apple has a set of very compelling products that threaten its best-selling category. When recently asked if the iPod Touch would cannibalize iPhone sales, Apple COO Tim Cook said he'd rather Apple cannibalize Apple than someone else.

More capable mobile phones might take the less-profitable low-end, but Apple needs to make sure it keeps the meaty part to itself. Service-oriented iPods mixed with handheld computers might be the best way the keep the iPod gravy train going.

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Add a Comment (Log in or register) 13 comments (Page 1 of 2)
Saving Bacon and other tidbits
by tragichipster May 6, 2008 7:09 AM PDT
Ina, Nice analysis as usual. I'd argue a few points or contribute a few of my own. * Perhaps it was the iMac that save Apple's bacon. The iPod came after the company had been restored to profitability and moved off every analysts deathwatch. The iPod played a different role, driving Apple's incredible growth and branding/design initiatives. * I think services are absolutely key. But it doesn't have to be a service that originates with the device itself. You can rent movies that you can play on your iPod from both iTunes and the Apple TV. Services need only originate within and pollenate Apple's closed iTunes ecosystem for them to add consumer value. * Subscription music is a likely end game. Jobs was right that people want to own music, but that is changing. And if the model allows both with Apple's ease of use, then they'll really have nailed it. They need wireless broadband to become more ubiquitous, and you'll then stream anything, but require purchase to listen off net. * We've only scratched the surface of services. Even the upcoming iTunes App Store is a service for which Apple will take a percentage. * You didn't hint at creating iPods designed specifically for more narrow niches. How about a Nike+ model that integrates the receiver instead of that being a plugin? Or another the incorporates the FM transmitter directly into the device? I see these niche-oriented versions of the iPod being easy to produce and providing a means for Apple to really target sub-segments of the market it already dominates, and potentially gain traction among users who don't already use them. Cheers. Patrick
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3rd Generation iPod
by frank bruce May 6, 2008 7:18 AM PDT
I still have one and I'm waiting to see what is cooking in the slow cook pot in Cupertino. I will like to see something that the Zune (yes they exist and I saw one in Best Buy, Fl.) has done very well; the ability to sync using the WiFi. I will like to see the current and next generation of iPod Touch / iPhone sync a Podcast using the WiFi without the need of iTunes, pretty much like the Apple TV does today.
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This is about convergence and portfolio
by mattmoo May 6, 2008 7:44 AM PDT
I am not sure i agree with the idea of adding services to an ipod. All you are going to create is a er, an ipod touch! This is about 2 things - convergence of technology and applications at the device end and convergence of products at the portfolio end. It can no longer look to add momentum into the IPOD line. It already has done it through the 'touch'. Remember the Touch will get better and cheaper as technology gets better and cheaper. This is simple Moores Law. Apple is now being forced by its own success with the IPOD, and technology pressures caused through convergence, to 'IPODize' something else in the consumer electronics space. Assuming their strategy for IPODizing is: strong brand, 'must have' evangelisation, backed with a near-walled garden service behind it a la itunes, we can be sure Apple is looking to augment its portfolio with: Innovation in the mobile phone space for sure. Televisions connected to a V.O.D service. Gaming consoles connected to a G.O.D service. Anything else where a product needs a service. Perhaps even an IFridge. I am a bit of a laggard with electronics but i am already using my Iphone as a music player whilst my Ipod sits at home inserted in a speaker system. I'll never buy another ipod regardless of 'services'.
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Next: Bluetooth A2DP streaming, Digital Radio, SDCard slot
by rslc May 6, 2008 8:02 AM PDT
->Ipod Nano shld include the above. Ipod Touch is a different category. Next 2: ->Low-end iPhone Nano without Wifi. ->Subcription based or Cheaper AppleTV.
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Real handheld computer for the Rest of Us
by technewsjunkie May 6, 2008 8:50 AM PDT
It is and will become more of.
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More Realistic
by Thomas, David May 6, 2008 9:14 AM PDT
Devices, like the shuffle, and nano have uses far beyond an iPod touch, or an iPhone. They can't, and won't be dismissed. I prefer my shuffle because it is so small, and compact it makes it possible to use it everywhere, hands free. This is in direct contrast to an iPhone, iTouch, or even a nano. The only way they could make a shuffle better, is to make the shuffle into a headset. The nano, is a bridge between the abilities of the shuffle, and providing visual information like an iTouch. It's small, affordable, and again, no hard-drive, providing a portability advantage. The iTouch is the precursor to a new computer. Pretty simple really, but it's funny how people have to view things before they accept them. The iPhone is a computer, the iTouch is a computer, both minus certain abilities, and their focus is on either its a "phone", or if it plays "music and video". Maybe these limited views are based in current design limitations. When 250gb+ flash drives are available, and fuel cell batteries, those limitations will evaporate into nothingness. In the end, an iPod will remain as it is (unless its abandoned by Apple), but its name will continue to be used to introduce new products.
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The dead horse: Stop beating it!
by ewelch May 6, 2008 9:16 AM PDT
The author must have been living in a cocoon or something for the past couple of years? Apple clearly opposes the idea of renting music. They have clearly stated that video is different than music. What part of that did you not hear/understand? My gosh some times I think people must be paid by Microsoft to keep spreading the FUD! And just as Microsoft abandons a whole group of Plays-4-Sure people, this astroturfing chestnut is brought up again? Here's a clue: Apple is doing better than fine. They are not about to collapse if the iPod doesn't go subscription. They sell way too many! Just because the numbers don't increase as dramatically as in the past means nothing - except that they would literally (and I'm using literally in it's literal sense for all you folks who don't know how to use the word) run out of people to sell them to in a few more years if the numbers didn't stop.
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iPods becomes iSwatch
by tundraboy May 6, 2008 12:09 PM PDT
I always thought that once the (low end) iPod market gets saturated and production costs plunge to the very low two digits, iPod will turn into a full-fledged impulse fashion accessory. With new designs churned out every month, and short-lived production runs with name 'guest designers' coming out with their own signature iPod models. I could see people collecting iPods, buying iPods every two or three months. No different from what Swatch did.
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New iPhone Feature Request
by bschmidt25 May 6, 2008 12:26 PM PDT
I have a request for the iPhone. How about changing the software so it doesn't become a $400 paperweight if you don't have the cell service active? And I'm not talking about making it so that you can get away with never activating it, just so that it will still work as an iPod if you ever decide to switch carriers. No one ever seems to mention this nice little "feature" of the iPhone, but that's a major hangup I have for not buying one right now (well that and no 3G). I wonder how many people are going to be surprised when they stop using it as a phone, but still want the iPod functionality...
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an unlocked iPhone
by gbc_14 May 6, 2008 2:17 PM PDT
is the future of the iPod. I often cringe whenever i bring my moto razr and ipod 5G together even when i have no need for the ipod (examples of which are during a party, when i go out with my wife, etc). i use the iPod, on such occasions, as my PDA so i can sift through my address book and calendar app whenever the need arises. i used to have a palm phone/PDA, but i don't like the way my mac and the palm sync data - it was a hit-or-miss affair. i would have bought the iPhone since i am already on at&t but i don't want to extend my contract anymore. and, say i did buy the current generation iphone and extend my contract, what can i do if i like the next generation iphone? will buying the new iphone extend my contract some more? will i be locked for more than 4 years with at&t? i think that will be a very scary scenario. i'm sure Apple would like people to buy as much iphones as they can - i, for example, own a 5G ipod and a shuffle, and my wife has a 2G ipod nano - but having a locked iphone is really a deal- breaker for me. i'd rather that the iphone is unlocked and i'll just add the data plan myself, if i choose to. i'm holding of from buying the Touch because i really would want to carry just one device. i might buy it, though, if apple still insists on locking the iphone, but only when my current ipods conk out.
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