Where To Learn From Apple?

Reading Time: 3 minutes

Luckily, Apple is not a new company and faculty at some of the world’s best business schools wrote numerous cases about its ups and downs. In fact, David Yoffie at HBS (who led their Executive Education division for many years) wrote a case on Apple almost every year — starting in 1992–1993 and the most recent one published in June 2018. Even though Yoffie doesn’t teach any open programs we know of, there are other opportunities to learn from Apple case authors.

The Blue Ocean Strategy course at INSEAD is based on the work W. Chan Kim and Renée Mauborgne, who authored a case on Apple “How Apple’s Corporate Strategy Drove High Growth” in 2012 (updated in 2014). The case discusses how “blue ocean strategy” moves helped transform the company. Their book (also updated in 2014), “Blue Ocean Strategy”, also uses Apple as an example of successful implementation of the blue ocean strategy for multi-business firms. Here is one of the illustrations. Did Apple stray from the blue ocean strategy? Was Apply Watch a pioneer? Or we are about to witness the birth of a new pioneer in their portfolio?

Screenshot from Blue Ocean Strategy (2014)

If strategy and X by X matrices are not your thing and you prefer to dig into the numbers, there is another amazing case and a professor whom you can meet in the classroom setting as early as September 2018!

 

So, remember how Apple sued Samsung for 2 billion dollars for copyright infringement back in 2012? Even though 2 billion might not sound impressive today for a 1-trillion-dollar company, you might wonder how Apple arrived at this number. Well, glad you asked! Because Oded Netzer at Columbia co-authored case called “Apple vs. Samsung: The $2 Billion Case”. In this case, he discusses how Apple’s expert witnesses used conjoined analysis to assign value to different features and thus ascertain the magnitude of lost revenues. Did they do a good job? (Spoiler alert — the US courts “only” awarded 400MM to Apple). You can ask Prof Netzer in person, if you enroll in his course on “Quantitative Intuition” — an excellent program for those who want to use both their left and right brains in making decisions.

WWSJD or What Would Steve Jobs Do? You can play the role by studying a case by Michael Lenox of Darden, called “Apple Inc.: Wither the Mac?” It’s 2011. Steve Jobs just left. HP announced they are exiting the PC business. Mobile gadgets are becoming ubiquitous. What are you going to do with the Mac? Well, if you want to check if you answer is correct and do it face-to-face with the author — sign up for the 12-day Management Development Program at Darden — this October.

Finally, you can actually take a course titled “Innovate Like Apple: Play Your way to New Ideas With Genius Games” in November. How cool is that? It’s offered by Rady School of Management at UCSD. It’s only one day, but it uses Genius Games created for Apple Computer to help the company’s designers innovate more efficiently. The games were developed in the 1980s by Jill Wright who teaches the course together with Rebecca Johannsen. If that’s not awesome, I don’t know what is 🙂

Ilya Breyman

CEO and Co-founder of Coursalytics

Recent Posts

Two books of 2023 that will help you succeed in the workplace

In an era of constant change, the workplace is not immune to the winds of…

5 days ago

Coursalytics Total Number of Open Courses Business Schools Ranking 2023

In the modern landscape of business education, traditional MBA rankings are increasingly viewed as insufficient.…

5 days ago

Most megaprojects fail. Yours doesn’t have to

Senior professor at INSEAD Stanislav Shekshnia commands attention in leadership, corporate governance, and entrepreneurial acumen.…

6 days ago

The multifaceted journey to corporate sustainability

Rapid strategy shifts in businesses, especially around sustainability, might be misleading. The focus tends to…

1 week ago

The symphony of brainstorming: Neuroscience meets Jazz

Once upon a time, a tech start-up executive team decided to organize a brainstorming session…

4 weeks ago

ChatGPT in education: When cheating isn’t cheating

As institutions grapple with the challenges and opportunities posed by emerging technologies, recent research from…

4 weeks ago