So What’s Best – The iPhone, iPad, or iPad Mini?

iPhone, iPad, or iPad Mini

So you’re thinking of getting a new iDevice and which one should you get. Kevin Achtzener from YoureMakingme.com asked me over and interviewed me on just that topic, where we have a quick look at all three, focussing on the new iPad mini. Check out the interview below and as well, please visit Kevin’s site for his take on our conversation. You can find it by visiting: YoureMakingMe.com

 

Apple Worldwide Developers Conference set for June 10-14

It might be a little late in coming but Apple has officially announced the dates for their 2013 Worldwide Developers Conference or WWDC MMXIII as it’s being referred to. WWDC is set to kick off June 10th and will run until June 14th at the usual place, Moscone West in San Francisco.

The five-day event usually kicks off with an opening keynote from the CEO, Tim Cook and sometimes there are even some new product announcements. The rest of the week, features over 100 technical sessions and hands on labs presented by over 1000 Apple engineers. Read MORE at CANOE TECH BLOG

 

Apple offers “Download Later” option on select purchases

DownloadNowWhen you make an iTunes purchase like a movie or TV series, don’t you want to download it now? But sometimes it’s a big file; maybe you’re on the road, have poor bandwidth or perhaps have a promo code that expires at midnight and hate lose out. Apple has a solution for that.

Read more…AT CANOE TECH BLOG

Review: X-Doria Dash Folio for iPad mini

 Xdoria1

Whenever a new gadget hits the market I’m always curious as to what kind of case the accessory makers will come up with. And while the iPad mini has been out for a little while, it was likely time to find it a protective case.

Read more…AT CANOE TECH BLOG

Improving your swing makes good GolfSense

GolfSense

If you’re thrilled that the snow melting and spring is on the horizon but your golf swing is something that depresses you, then you might be happy to know that help just might be on the way. GolfSense by Zepp Labs is a neat little lightweight 17 gram gadget that with the help of its companion app, captures your swing, analyzes it and offers guidance as to how you can improve your score.

Read more… At Canoe Tech Blog

Telus, Rogers and Bell slash iPhone 5 pricing

Rogers iPhone 5

Rogers Offering

If you’re looking for an iPhone 5, now might be a great time to consider one. As rumours of the iPhone 5S and even an iPhone mini continue to circulate, Canada’s three major telcos are offering lowering pricing on the iPhone 5 models with a term plan only, with prices on the 16GB models being made available for under $100 or even free for a refurbished unit with one provider.

Read more…AT CANOE TECH BLOG

Apple bumps speed, drops prices on MacBook Pro with Retina display

MacBookPro RetinaIn a surprise move and just in time for Valentine’s Day, Apple has sweetened the appeal of the MacBook Pro with Retina display by updating the processors with a little more horsepower and lowering prices on some of the configurations making them a little more affordable.

Read more…AT CANOE TECH BLOG

How to build insanely great customer loyalty

AppleExperienceEDMONTON, AB, Feb. 8, 2013/ Troy Media/ – You don’t have to look very far to find one the best examples of building insanely great customer loyalty. And if the words “insanely great” aren’t enough to let the cat out of the bag, maybe iPhone, iPod and iPad might just give it away.

Yes, it’s Apple! It has a plethora of fans, advocates and customers that not only buy, they also live, eat, sleep and breathe Apple. It’s no wonder Apple’s product announcements become huge events and why people are willing to camp out at all mall overnight like Edmontonian John Winslow or even days in line to be the first to get their new “iDevice”, when they could just order it on-line. Even Steve Wozniak, who co-founded Apple with Steve Jobs, stood in line for hours on more than one occasion to get an iPhone 4s, iPhone 5 and an iPad.

It’s this kindly of loyalty that helps the Apple store remain tops in revenue per square foot. Any businessperson, whether in retail or not, would want to know the secret of their magic; I know. I would.

In The Apple Experience: Secrets to Insanely Great Customer Service, by Carmine Gallo (McGraw Hill, 2012, 234 ppg.), we learn some of those secrets. Gallo interviewed scores of professionals and spent hundreds of hours at Apple retail stores. He takes us on a journey, sharing what he learned about Steve Jobs’ vision for the stores. He tells how the concept came about, what it was modelled after and even the secrets of landing a job at one.

But more importantly, Gallo illustrates how the customer loyalty is directly related to their Apple experience and Apple’s total commitment to its customers; and how businesses, if they wanted, could reinvent themselves and benefit by learning what Apple does.

Gallo’s analysis of the Apple model boils down to three-step action plan, each with a distinct area of focus:

1.Inspire your internal customer, i.e. the employees. Apple hires for attitude, not aptitude. Purple spiked hair, tattoos and leather may prevent you from gaining employment in certain companies, but if you’re the right person, for Apple, those things don’t matter. Gallo says the company trains and cultivates fearless employees who are encouraged to foster a feedback loop and keeping open, transparent and consistent communications with management. Their employees are willing to take initiatives to do what’s right and they’re empowered to take ownership. As a result, they become loyal customers themselves.

2. Serve your external customer. Ensure they have a consistent experience applying the five steps of Apple service: Approach, Probe, Present, Listen and End fondly. They approach, usually making eye contact within 10 seconds. They’ll quickly assess whether they can be of service; they’ll probe politely, asking meaningful questions, and then listen to what the customer has to say first rather than immediately imposing their opinions. Their presentation illustrates what the customer can do with their tool, the benefits and what the possibilities are rather than spew out a series of specifications. They guide customers, allowing them to make to their own conclusions and help unleash their inner genius while being considerate of their time.

3.Set the stage. Apple creates an environment is such is that they are focused on enriching lives. There’s an emphasis on relationship building rather than simply pushing for a sale. They want the customer to be clear in their minds before they buy and thus and Apple Store is never cluttered. They pay attention to detail with a simplistic and clean layout. All equipment is always functional. And when you are ready to buy, the cash/checkout is right there and wireless.

As I read through the book over a period of a few weeks, I put some of Gallo’s observations to the test. My local Apple retail store is very convenient as it’s virtually across the street from my home at Edmonton’s Southgate Centre mall, where I enjoy shopping and walk the mall four to five times a week. No, I did not apply for a job, but I did interact with employees and spent time just observing and, of course, playing. Setting the stage also includes offering a multisensory experience. Apple wants you to touch, play and interact. Ever wonder why displays are always set at 90-degrees? It’s because it forces you to touch it, to interact with it and set it to your personal preference. Clever, isn’t it?

While not everything was exactly as Gallo described each time, it came pretty darned close. I didn’t witness anyone bringing into the store a goat or having pizzas delivered, as Comedian Mark Malkoff did in July 2011 while having his iPhone repaired, but then again, I’m not there 24/7. Besides, this is Edmonton and it would have to be a moose and and a six-pack of Molson Canadian with the pizza.

Reading this book certainly gives an insight as to what Apple does at its stores to keep its customers happy and loyal and there are more topics covered in this 234 page book than mentioned here.

I did feel however that there was void in this book in two areas. First, it focuses on the retail store, with little or no discussion of the on-line or phone experience and that’s part of the entire Apple organization. Second, while Gallo mentions interviews, there does not appear to be any input from Apple itself. I’d be curious as to what the folks at Apple themselves would have to say.

Overall The Apple Experience: Secrets to Insanely Great Customer Serviceis a really good read. It doesn’t matter whether you like Apple or not or whether you are in retail of not, this book contain some real nuggets and some great stories that anyone in business or just curious can learn from and relate to.

Greg Gazin is a Tech Columnist, Small Business and Technology Speaker and Senior Editor at Troy Media. He can be reached at  Gadgetguy.CA on Twitter @gadgetgreg or you can find him on Empire Avenue at(e)GADGET1.

This article is FREE to use on your websites or in your publications. However, Troy Media, with a link to its web site, MUST be credited.

25th billion download earns German man a €10,000 iTunes card

giftcards_music1EDMONTON, AB, Feb. 6, 2013/ Troy Media/ – Phillip Lüpke from Germany is €10,000 richer for purchasing a song from the Apple iTunes Store. It’s not just any song, it’s “Monkey Drums” (Goksel Vancin Remix) by Chase Buch. But what’s particularly special is that it’s the 25 billionth download from the world’s most popular music download site.

Apple announced the record setting milestone today, singling out Lüpke. He’ll be awarded a €10,000 iTunes card, about C$13,500 in addition to the recognition and bragging rights. The €10K should allow him to multiply his collection and then some.

Twenty-five billion is a lot of songs. To put it into perspective, if every person in the world were to download three to four songs from the iTunes store, that would be roughly the same number of songs that have been actually downloaded to date.

Fans continue to download songs from iTunes at a record pace. After its inaugural launch in April 2003, it took until February 2006 to reach one billion. About four years later, on February 24, 2010 – Steve Jobs’ 55thbirthday – that number hit 10 billion. It only took just over two and a half years for that number to double yet again.

There seems to be no end in sight to the growth.

“(We’re) averaging over 15,000 songs downloaded per minute,” according to Eddy Cue, Apple’s senior vice president of Internet Software and Services.

iPad_iTunesThe ability to purchase from the iTunes store is more than just a convenience to music purchasers.

“In a lot of ways, iTunes has leveled the playing field for musicians. Whether you’re unsigned, indie, major, whatever – it’s the place most people go to buy digital music,” said Wesley Schultz, guitarist and lead vocalist of The Lumineers. “iTunes doesn’t exclude any musicians simply because they’re not yet established or popular.”

Greg Gazin is a Tech Columnist, Small Business and Technology Speaker and Senior Editor at Troy Media. He can be reached at  Gadgetguy.CA on Twitter @gadgetgreg or you can find him on Empire Avenue at(e)GADGET1.

If iPad mini was a car it might be a BMW 1 Series

iPadMini

Being accustomed to using an iPad, I thought it would be an interesting exercise to leave the iPad at home and take along the iPad mini. I wanted to see if it would live up to my expectations and the claim by “Sir” Jonathan Ive, Apple’s senior vice president of Industrial Design, that the iPad Mini is a “concentration and not a reduction of the original”.

Read more…AT CANOE TECH BLOG