How Apple can prevent the iPhone from going the way of the PC

And ahead of the iPhone 8 launch this Tuesday, September 12, that word looms large for Apple (AAPL), as it could pose perhaps the biggest risk to the company long-term.

After all, if the company can’t continue to offer enough value-add features that inspire consumers to pay up for new models in the US or pay up in development markets, the iPhone is at risk of going the way of the PC: down.

This comes into focus ahead of the new phone launch, with a rumored price tag of over $1,000. Apple is betting on consumers seeing enough value in the new phone to pay up this time around … and the pressure is on for the innovation to continue.

The lesson of PC commoditization: A road Apple doesn’t want to take

Over the last three decades, the PC has transformed from prized technological development to a regular part of our everyday lives. And for a long time, flashy brands like Gateway and Packard Bell were among names like IBM and Dell that were all marketing the unique things they offered. But it didn’t take long for all these PC brands to become a commodity with minimal differentiation between brands and with price to become the core decision point for consumers.

Apple starts teasing new features coming to iPhone and iPad
Apple starts teasing new features coming to iPhone and iPad

Commoditization is often seen as the kiss of death for a company, product or industry—as it threatens to push down pricing and eventually profitability.

In fact, 2016 marked the the fifth consecutive year of worldwide PC shipment decline, according to Gartner.

“The broad PC market has been static as technology improvements have not been sufficient to drive real market growth,” according Mikako Kitagawa, principal analyst at Gartner. “[T]he market driven by PC enthusiasts is not big enough to drive overall market growth.”

Meanwhile, prices for computers and peripheral products (like computer storage devices and keyboards) have fallen dramatically. From December 1997 to August 2015, the Consumer Price Index for personal computers and peripheral equipment declined 96%, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

And the actions by the original major PC makers—IBM, Hewlett Packard and Dell—reflect the difficulty of the industry commoditization as they turned to focus on higher-growth areas. First in 2004, IBM (IBM) made the decision to sell its PC business to Lenovo, looking to focus on services. Then in 2014, HP announced it would split the company into a PC business, now HP Inc. (HPQ), and its faster-growth enterprise computing, storage and networking business, now Hewlett Packard Enterprises (HPE). And in 2013, Dell was taken private, largely because of a struggling PC business. Soon after, in 2015, the company announced it would acquire data-storage provider EMC in the largest tech deal ever, an affirmation of its efforts to diversify away from the slowing PC business.