iPad&iPhone user

Is the iPhone SE a surprise hit for Apple?

After Apple’s latest quarterly earnings call, we got a hint it has a surprising hit product on its hands.

- Jason Snell

The thing about Apple’s financial results is that they lag a month behind reality, so the hottest just-released new products often have little or no impact in the first quarterly report after their release. All of the products Apple introduced on 21 March began shipping on 31 March, while

Apple’s fiscal second quarter ended 26 March. So if you’re looking for a sign that the 9.7in iPad Pro or the iPhone SE is doing well in the numbers, you won’t find them.

But it’s not all about the numbers. Sometimes it’s about the forecast for next quarter, tidbits of informatio­n that Apple executives let out in interviews or during their quarterly conference call with analysts. And on Tuesday we got a hint that Apple has a surprising hit product on its hands: the iPhone SE.

A big audience for a small phone

The idea that the iPhone SE might sell well isn’t unreasonab­le. Though the tech industry has fallen over itself to promote a bigger-is-better mantra about smartphone­s, not everyone wants to use a phone the size of the iPhone 6s or 6s Plus. When Apple announced the iPhone SE, Apple’s Greg Joswiak dropped the tidbit that Apple had sold 30 million 4in iPhones in the previous year.

That’s roughly 13 percent of the total number of iPhones sold during that period, but consider: The iPhone 5s was long in the tooth for that entire period, and overshadow­ed first by the iPhone 6 and 6 Plus and, later, by the 6s and 6s Plus. And yet, despite all of that, the 4in iPhone managed to grab 13 percent of total iPhone share.

At £359, iPhone SE has the lowest starting price of any new iPhone ever. That’s sure to make it an appealing product. And then toss in the fact that some unknown portion of the iPhone buying public either held on to their iPhone 5, 5c or 5s because they just didn’t want a larger iPhone, and another

portion bought an iPhone 6 because it was the new iPhone, but discovered that they preferred the size of their previous phone. So the stage was set. There was a good case to be made that the iPhone SE would sell well, maybe even comprising 20 percent of the total number of iPhones sold. Pretty good prospects for the little guy, right?

They didn’t expect it

I suspect, though, that inside Apple there was some scepticism about the iPhone SE’s potential audience. Perhaps people at Apple got a little carried away with that same bigger-is-better philosophy and lost perspectiv­e about why people might want a lowcost, small, full-featured iPhone.

That’s just speculatio­n. What’s fact, based on what Apple CEO Tim Cook said on Tuesday, is that Apple blew it when it came to its forecasts for how well the iPhone SE would sell. Right now, “overwhelmi­ng demand” for the iPhone SE means that Apple can’t make them fast enough – that used to happen all the time, but it’s been a while since Apple has been behind on iPhone supply.

And Cook owned up to it. “It is clear that there is demand there, even much beyond what we thought, and so that is really why we have the constraint that we have,” he said. More specifical­ly, Cook suggested that Apple underestim­ated the number of people who “wanted the latest technologi­es, but wanted it in a more compact package.”

The power of the price tag

In an era where phone subsidies are being replaced by financing plans, consumers are now seeing –

often for the very first time – the actual price of that shiny new smartphone they’ve been buying every two years or so. That’s going to lead to some sticker shock. Having the iPhone line start at £359, or £17.24 per month, is a good place for Apple to be, even in the richest markets.

But more than that, the iPhone SE gives Apple access to some potential customers it might not have been able to reach before. Apple’s never going to be the low-price leader in a category, but it’s a brand that represents quality, and people do aspire to buy Apple products, most especially the iPhone.

“It’s attracting people who aspire to own an iPhone, but couldn’t quite stretch to the entry price of the iPhone,” Cook said Tuesday. “I do think that we will be really happy with the sort of new-toiPhone customers that we see from here, because of the early returns we’ve had.”

A key player, not the star

I think it’s unlikely that the iPhone SE will ever sell in amounts within hailing distance of the top-ofthe-line iPhones. But that’s okay. The iPhone is no longer a single product, like it was in the old days, but a product line. If you consider last year’s models, which are still lingering, there are five different iPhone models available to potential buyers.

The iPhone SE doesn’t need to be a runaway success. It’s a part of the larger story, a product that sets a lower entry price and appeals to people who don’t like the feel of a larger phone in their hands. But it’s clear that, at least right now, it’s a bigger part of Apple’s overall iPhone picture than even Apple itself expected a month ago.

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