Thoughts On Apple’s Ping

September 2nd, 2010

Thoughts regarding Apple’s entry into social stuff, Ping.

The Good

The Bad

Conclusion

Ping’s greatest strength echoes Apple’s best strategy: only getting into markets where there’s a good chance of success. It’s centered on music, something Apple knows extremely well through iPod sales, a huge user base of accounts linked to credit cards, user purchases, relationships with artists, and Genius data.

Regarding its closed nature: If Facebook is any measure, for better or worse, most people don’t care about “open.” Every iTunes music customer has already voted with their dollars, and the iPad is a success in spite of all the things tech pundits pointed out Apple wouldn’t let you do. Ping is targeted at the mainstream where the iTunes Store currently resides. Early adopter blessing isn’t a prerequisite for success.

In other words: if you don’t own an Apple product or have never purchased anything from iTunes for whatever personal, dogmatic reasons, of course Ping won’t make any sense. It’s for the millions of users who genuinely like iTunes, own iPhones / iPads / iPods, and make iTunes purchases regularly and impulsively.

With that in mind, plus the idea that it’s an iTunes Store feature — not a stand-alone service — I’m having a hard time seeing how Ping can fail.

1 Comment

  1. […] the release of iTunes 10, checking out Ping, and then some random reviews from different folks, noticed general bitching about iTunes sucking. […]