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November 30, 2007 Why Apple Can't Do To Video What It Did To MusicBut What It Can Do To Yet Succeedwith Ellen Daley, April Lawson |
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Apple's appetite for a slice of the video pie has proven bigger than its reach. The iTunes video experiment of selling TV shows for $1.99 and movies for upwards of $9.99 — although a great service to the 4% of online adults who regularly buy video on iTunes — is not a mainstream model. Importantly, it won't translate into what Apple really wants: increased demand for sophisticated hardware like the iPod touch and Apple TV. Those devices still have a role, but they won't go beyond early adopters without opening the business model to include video experiences not offered today. Media strategy professionals take note: there's still plenty of opportunity to stake a claim in video territory.
This is an excerpt
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eBusiness/eCommerce, The Mobile Channel, B2B Sales & Marketing, Corporate Strategy, Product & Solutions Strategies, Marketing & Advertising, Television Advertising
Consumer Technology, Digital Content, Media & Entertainment, Consumer Media & Entertainment, Movies, Television
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