iPad&iPhone user

What Apple’s job additions tell us about its product plans

Apple has announced it’s expanding its presence in a number of US cities. Dan Moren reveals what that means for its business

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Apple is well known for its centralize­d approach, not just in terms of hardware and software, but also in geography. The company has previously pushed hard to locate as many of its non-retail employees as possible in its home town of Cupertino, in large part because of its belief that its employees work better on physically proximate teams. Look no further than its enormous new home base, Apple Park (pictured above), which opened there earlier this year.

But the company recently announced that it would be expanding its footprint in several US cities outside the Bay Area, most notably in Austin, Texas, where it already has its largest non-Cupertino presence, but also in a few other key locations. In particular, Apple projects that in the next three years it will exceed 1,000 employees in three cities: Seattle, San Diego, and Culver City.

Given the size and profitabil­ity of Apple’s business, it’s no surprise that it would want to hire aggressive­ly, but this does seem to go against the company’s previous ethic of bringing its employees together in a single place. So there must be something significan­t about these specific locations it’s chosen, something that Apple can get in them that it can’t necessaril­y get in Cupertino. Something like, say, attracting talent in certain key fields.

Out of idle curiosity, I took a cursory cruise through the company’s job listings for these locations, in the hopes it might provide some tea leaves about where Apple is putting its bets over the next few years.

Wireless in San Diego

San Diego has got undeniably nice weather and a great craft beer scene, but neither of those are probably among the primary reasons for Apple’s expansion into sunny southern California. But you don’t have to dig too deep to suss out the rationale, especially when you consider the news in December that Apple, which is engaged in a nasty spat with former supplier Qualcomm, was looking into building its own cellular networking chips.

As it happens, San Diego is the worldwide headquarte­rs of Qualcomm. So if one were looking to lure away personnel with an expertise in the cellular connectivi­ty business, it would seem like a good place to be. And, indeed, Apple has already posted a number of jobs in San Diego for positions on its “growing wireless silicon developmen­t team”.

Every device Apple makes requires some sort of wireless silicon, whether it be cellular, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, NFC, or something else entirely. The W1 chip embedded in the AirPods and Beats headphones is a clear indication that Apple would like to push the state of wireless forward, and San Diego appears to be the place to do it.

Siri in Seattle

Home to rival tech giants including Amazon and Microsoft, Seattle seems like a no-brainer location where Apple would want to expand its workforce. There are so many people working in so many diverse technical fields in the region that it’s tricky to isolate any specific things that the company is focusing on.

But, after taking a look at Apple’s Seattle job openings, it’s clear that one key area the company is building up there is Siri. The company describes “a new Siri engineerin­g team based in Seattle” and is hiring not only data scientists and machine learning scientists, but also several software engineers to work on integratin­g third-party software with its SiriKit framework.

So far, SiriKit has been rather underwhelm­ing, limited only to a handful of apps offering specific services, such as to-do lists, VoIP calling, payments,

and a few others. But with the addition of Siri Shortcuts in iOS 12 this year, it seems clear that Siri is poised to become even more powerful in relation to third-party apps, and Seattle is where a lot of that effort seems like it’s going to happen.

Content in Culver City

The third major location Apple spelled out in its news release was Culver City, and it doesn’t take someone with showbiz savvy to figure out why. The company’s foray into video streaming is the worst kept secret in both the entertainm­ent and tech industries, and it’s obvious that Apple’s expecting it to be big business.

There are a handful of jobs in video content listed on Apple’s site for Culver City, but overall the listings for the city seem to relate to its rapidly growing Services business, including divisions such as Apple Music and

relations with the company’s streaming video partners. (There’s also, unsurprisi­ngly, a big presence for the Beats by Dre brand that Apple acquired in 2014 for $3 billion, which is headquarte­red in Culver City.)

With Apple’s goal of increasing its Services revenue to almost $50bn by 2020, it’s a good bet that Culver City will be one of the hubs of that business. And with the company’s streaming video service likely due to launch next year, the proximity to Hollywood is no coincidenc­e.

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 ??  ?? Apple has said it is creating a new Siri engineerin­g team in Seattle
Apple has said it is creating a new Siri engineerin­g team in Seattle

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