Vancouver Sun

Apple’s HomePod delay not just a one-time thing

Series of hiccups could tarnish image of discipline

- SHIRA OVIDE Shira Ovide is a Bloomberg Gadfly columnist covering technology. She previously was a reporter for the Wall Street Journal. Bloomberg

Christmas will be a little disappoint­ing for some Apple fans. And the company’s holiday season slip-up may be another sign that its crown as the discipline­d king of manufactur­ing is becoming tarnished.

Apple Inc. acknowledg­ed on Friday that its much-hyped HomePod voice-activated home speaker won’t go on sale next month in the U.S. and two other countries, as the company had announced in June. The company said the product needs more seasoning.

“We can’t wait for people to experience HomePod,” Apple said in a statement, “but we need a little more time before it’s ready for our customers.”

It has been odd that Apple merely said the HomePod would be ready for sale in “December” but had not provided a more specific date since the summer. Now we know why.

A delayed product on its own isn’t necessaril­y a big deal. Sure, Apple misses a shot at 2017 holiday sales for the HomePod, but this is a long game and one holiday season doesn’t matter in the grand scheme of things for the world’s most valuable public company.

The troubling thing, though, is product delays or other problems are no longer unusual for Apple.

Last year, when Apple released the iPhone 7 lineup, the company acknowledg­ed that it misjudged demand for the larger-screen Plus version of that phone. That meant there weren’t enough of the devices for a while, and Apple most likely missed out on some revenue.

And the company has had several manufactur­ing bottleneck­s with its new iPhone X, which is a big reason the phone will be tough to find on store shelves for many months.

To be fair, the 10th anniversar­y iPhone model has some gnarly new technology and parts that are tough to assemble on tight time frames and at high quality. And it’s not unusual for Apple to have early troubles making new iPhone models, or at least trouble making enough to meet demand.

Again, the trouble is the number of times there are production problems or supply-demand imbalances, especially when Apple needs the revenue lift from new products more than ever.

A year ago, Apple also pushed back the sales date for its AirPods wireless headphones, and the products were also in short supply for some time afterward.

Apple’s statement on Friday about the HomePod delay seems to be lifted almost directly from its AirPods delay announceme­nt in October 2016, which said: “We don’t believe in shipping a product before it’s ready, and we need a little more time before AirPods are ready for our customers.”

That is in the rearview mirror, it seems.

Apple doesn’t disclose sales figures for AirPods, but the company said sales of its “wearables” — which include the Apple Watch and AirPods — rose 75 per cent in the September quarter from a year earlier. (This perhaps isn’t surprising, given the introducti­on of several new or revamped products.)

Remember that before Tim Cook was promoted to CEO of Apple, he was the maestro of manufactur­ing. Cook managed Apple’s global network of component suppliers and assembly factories and kept everything running smoothly and on schedule. Now, though, Apple’s product lineup is more sprawling than ever before. And its discipline is showing some signs of wear.

One or two problems with manufactur­ing or slips in anticipati­ng product demand isn’t egregious. But start adding up the number of hiccups Apple has had recently making new products reliably or releasing them on its announced schedule, and it starts to look as if the company’s manufactur­ing mastery is no longer assured.

 ?? AMY OSBORNE/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? From the iPhone X to the AirPods, Apple’s numerous production problems and supply-demand imbalances could shake its reputation as a master manufactur­er, especially when Apple needs the revenue lift from new products more than ever, writes Shira Ovide.
AMY OSBORNE/AFP/GETTY IMAGES From the iPhone X to the AirPods, Apple’s numerous production problems and supply-demand imbalances could shake its reputation as a master manufactur­er, especially when Apple needs the revenue lift from new products more than ever, writes Shira Ovide.

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