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What Apple Must Say And Do About The iPhone 4

Posted by: Arik Hesseldahl on July 15, 2010

You know you’ve got a problem when your product is ridiculed in David Letterman’s Top Ten List.

The CBS late-night funnyman on July 14 set up his “Top Ten Signs You’ve Purchased a Bad iPhone 4” by telling his viewers there’s “something hinky” about the new iPhone, and that “they’re not hooked up right,” and that “they don’t like to be held.” From Apple’s point of view, it went downhill from there.

It’s not the first time that an Apple product has been the butt of the late-night TV jokesmiths. Saturday Night Live’s Seth Meyers, late last year, in listing the challenges to the iPhone: “Making phone calls.” This one, however, is starting to hurt.

From the day it first went on sale in June, of problems with the iPhone 4 and its tendency to lose signal strength or drop calls entirely when held a certain way seemed like just another tempest in an Apple product launch teapot. And yet the story refused to die, making the leap from enthusiast blogs, to the mainstream media, to Letterman. And at least three lawsuits are already pending. Now my colleagues at Bloomberg New are reporting that Apple senior executives, including CEO Steve Jobs, knew about what’s since become known as the “iPhone death grip,” as far back as a year ago, and were warned about it by a senior engineer and antenna expert.

Some of this is to be expected. Apple’s high-profile products have become a favorite target for irritable consumer advocates, class action lawyers, legislative and regulatory agencies, and the occasional jealous competitor.

This time is proving different. Now Apple is hearing not only from late-night comedians, but at least one U.S. Senator. Among those calling on Apple to make amends is Sen. Charles Schumer of New York, who’s released an open letter to Jobs asking for a “clearly written explanation of the cause of the reception problem,” and a “public commitment to remedy it free of charge.”

Clearly Apple’s decade-long run as a reliable consumer electronics hitmaker is at risk. There is still time to get this right. It’s next move will be to hold a press conference on Friday, July 16, at which it has promised only to discuss the iPhone 4.

When the complaints first emerged, Apple’s first move was to dismiss them. In emails from purchasers, CEO Steve Jobs advised consumers to “hold it differently.” The complaints persisted, so Apple investigated. On July 2 it said it was “stunned” to find that the formula the iPhone uses to determine how it should display signal strength was in some cases displaying more bars than it should be. Essentially, the iPhone wasn’t losing its signal, it just looked like it was.

Next came Consumer Reports, the gold standard of American consumer quality testing, announcing from atop its mountain that Apple’s otherwise wonderful device does indeed suffer from a hardware flaw that will cause it drop calls in places where AT&T’s network coverage isn’t strong. Apple shares fell $5.49 or more than 2 percent the next day. After increasing in value by 20 percent this year, Apple is down more than 7 percent since the iPhone 4 first went on sale on June 24.

While as yet there’s no evidence to support that iPhone 4 sales are being hurt, the time has come for Apple to do what it does so well, and get control of this issue, by doing right by its customers, admitting the full nature of the problem, and taking a few lumps if necessary. Here are some thoughts for what should emerge from Friday’s press conference and for some simple moves Apple can make going after that.

Apple’s vaunted reputation for product quality comes in no small part from an obsessive attention to detail. Moving the iPhone’s antenna to the outer-shell where it would come into contact with the human hand was not a decision arrived at lightly. The implications of so fundamental a shift in the industrial design of the product that brought in more than 40 percent of revenue in its most recent quarter would have been studied and tested ad nauseum for months if not longer.

In that case one of two things are true: The testing failed to detect the problem, or the decision to make the change was made despite the results of testing. Bloomberg’s reporting suggests it was the latter, in which case Apple may have misjudged how readily people might have discovered the problem. It’s entirely possible that the urgent need for more space to accommodate a larger battery and more chips in the end outweighed the perceived threat of radio interference from the human hand. Whatever the case, admit whatever mistakes were made. That’s step one.

Step two is to let customers vent their frustrations and quit pretending they don’t exist. Some reports have suggested that Apple has deleted comments from frustrated consumes. If true, that’s a very bad idea that only makes Apple look worse.

Do the opposite. Create a forum where Apple employees communicate clearly with affected customers. Giving people the chance to let off steam within reason on know that Apple is listening will prevent them from taking their complaints elsewhere, such as the comment sections of gadget blogs like Engadget and Gizmodo and their ilk, where they’re less likely to be polite. It also reduces that chances that those sites keep the story alive with more reader-inspired follow-up stories. People are right to be ticked off that their phone doesn’t make phone calls in certain circumstances, regardless of the reason. Within reason, let them have their say.

Step three. Send every iPhone 4 user, whether they’ve complained or not, a coupon that’s good for a free bumper, or a credit toward the purchase of an iPhone case, not only in the Apple store, but any store. Apple’s $29 colored bumpers (probably $1 to $2 worth of material and $27-$28 of pure profit) are said to essentially eliminate the problem. If the bumpers do the job, so will practically any case that keeps the hand out of contact with the gap between the antennas. Additionally: Every new iPhone 4 customer walks out with a free bumper in the color of their choice.

Assuming Apple has sold 2 million iPhones so far, it would cost at most $100 million to $150 million to give free bumpers or cases to everyone who’s bought one so far. In the worst case, double that to cover another 2 million iPhones. These figures are rounding errors for cash-rich Apple, which has $23.1 billion in cash and short-term investments plus another $18.5 billion in long term investments on its balance sheet.

Step four. Extend the time during which unsatisfied customers can return their phones for any reason for a full refund. By default, it’s 30 days. Give everyone affected plenty of time to mull it over. For this model, make it 90 days so long as the phone isn’t broken in other ways, and waive any annoying restocking fees.

Step five: Don’t recall the iPhone. A recall will only make this situation worse, and needlessly cause a lot of damage to the iPhone brand that will be difficult to repair. As others have observed, the iPhone isn’t a Toyota that doesn’t slow down when the brakes are applied. Lives are not at stake. Reputations are. Take what reasonable manufacturing steps are necessary to eliminate the problem entirely and apply them to future production runs. It may be necessary to allow early buyers to swap their early-generation iPhone 4s for later ones. Those people will likely be small in number. Grin and bear any related financial hit. It will only hurt a little.

Step six. Book Steve Jobs on Letterman. Millions will watch and forgive Apple as Jobs brings his unrivaled star power is the preeminent business and media personality of the moment to the stage of the Ed Sullivan Theater, and shows late-night TV viewers, a sense of humor, a little humanity, and a little humility. Letterman will do what he always does when people whose star power exceeds his own show up, ask a few probing softball questions, make a few self-deprecating jokes, and maybe pretend to eat an iPhone (again). Soon the great iPhone crisis of 2010 will be a memory.

Reader Comments

not steve jobs

July 15, 2010 2:36 PM

and if the call drops when you are making an emergency call? What do you do? Buy first bumper before you need to make that call?
What a bs article!! You should mentioned that FCC is also responsible for not catching this issue in the testing processes, or maybe ask yourself why FCC did to catch the issue!
Of course money is money and your Apple shares counts more then consumers!

Greg

July 15, 2010 3:12 PM

I love my iPhone 4, but it has some major issues that are really frustrating. I have owned both the 3G and 3GS and since receiving my iPhone 4 on the 23rd of June, I have had more dropped calls than my entire time with the two previous phones. Most of the time I drop call while I'm not even touching the phone, talking on Bluetooth.

People buy the iPhone 4 for its inovative design and features, why would we want to cover it up with a bandaid fix like the bumper? I just want my phone to work like a phone. Pretty much at this point the iPhone 4 is worthless as a phone. It does however kick butt on everything else.

I'm seriously considering going back to a 3GS just so I can make phone calls again.

shane

July 15, 2010 4:03 PM

It's high time that Apple recalled the product! I am so pissed with my new iphone4 and regret giving up my Moto Razr.

Thomas Foster

July 15, 2010 4:57 PM

Couldn't agree more. I love my iPhone and think a mass recall would be silly idea. The people who own iPhone 4's are the die hard Apple fanbois and the many customers when a new product is available, so therefore they should be treated with respect. Let's just hope Friday's conference is not a two hour seminar about how to hold your phone

Needless Doodles

July 15, 2010 4:57 PM

One point you missed. Apple gets so much press that people like Chuck Schumer and Arik Hesseldahl publicly jump into the fray on even miniscule concerns to reflect in the attention, keeping minor issues alive whether warranted or not. I can't remember the last time Schumer and Hesseldahl both offered their wise guidance to a CEO, politician, or diplomat whether related to war, terrorism, or any social issue of import.

preston hoover

July 15, 2010 4:59 PM

thats was a great write up...all of your suggestions would more than alleviate the problem. especially the bumper. personally i am careful with my phone and hate the thought of a case to take away from the already stunning beauty, but if its necessary it better be free. however i don't see apple allowing people to trade in there used iphone 4 for a "corrected" iphone 4. no way.

Matt

July 15, 2010 5:03 PM

I'd hate to say it but I love the new phone and not have had any problems with reception at all

Jacob

July 15, 2010 5:06 PM

Really, Shane? By comparison the iPhone 4 is 100 times better than the Moto Razr. I own an iPhone 4 and am thrilled with it! I have had maybe one instance in the past three weeks where I lost cell phone reception and I live in a small rural town, so to remedy the situation I went to Best Buy and bought a case. Which you should do anyway because they are already easy to break. So stop your belly aching, or go and activate your MOTO RAZR... hahaha... that's just ridiculous.

Jacob

July 15, 2010 5:08 PM

Oh.. and to Arik... great article, I believe Apple or BP should hire you for PR cause that's the best thing any company could do. Admit your wrong and fix the problem.

New User

July 15, 2010 6:25 PM

Just switched from a Motorola Cliq and before that a G1... love the new iPhone 4... new reception issues yet... better battery life and actual apps made by people who can program.... don't know why I stayed with Android that long...

John

July 15, 2010 7:03 PM

My life has bee 'hell' since buying my wife a new iPhone 4 to replace her iPhone, 1st generation. Dropped calls when talking to her mother is inexcusable. The Bluetooth connectivity in the car for hands-free is no longer reliable. The 2nd IPhone 4 I order arrived yesterday and is sitting on my desk with the box unopened. I have been an Apple products user since 1998.

It will be interesting to see how Apple handles the situation tomorrow. iPhone 4 + ATT service is less reliable then 2-soup cans and a piece of kit string.

Not t mention that OS4 for the my iPhone G3 has made the screen response slow and no longer fun to use as well. Don't tell me to reset the phone. I've done this a dozen times besides turning off the power.

Yes I am a dissatisfied Apple customer. The good news is this is Apple and not Microsoft, as MS never would admit they have made a mistake. JHM

Ashley

July 15, 2010 10:11 PM

If you have a problem with the phone, return it. I can't seem to comprehend what the big deal is. Lawsuits? Complaints? If you really don't like the phone that much return it and you will get a refund.

Get yourself a droid or something.

Its funny because half of the people complaining don't even HAVE an iPhone.

Ralber

July 15, 2010 10:41 PM

This article is rather naive. You estimated Apple's cost of providing a bumper based on the # of phones sold to date. How about the several million phones Apple expects/hopes to sell in the several months before they push a new design through the long FCC approval process? And what about the blow to Steve's ego when his sleek, shiny piece of industrial design is ruined by a silly rubber condom? I'll bet he only agreed to make the ugly "bumpers" available as premium options b/c he was aware of the reception/sending problem and hoped they'd remedy the situation if anybody ever discovered what his engineers had reported to him.

Worse is your suggestion that he appear on Letterman where he would dominate a meek David Letterman. Haven't you ever seen Steve in a setting where he has to share the stage with a peer? His arrogance and poor social skills are what come across, not his towering "genius." If David Letterman acts meek, it will be out of sympathy.

This article would present very different advice if the author had ever met Steve Jobs in person (I have) and if he had taken into account Apple's future plans, now jeopardized by its blunder, for the iPhone.

Eric

July 15, 2010 10:45 PM

All I can say as an iPhone 4 owner since June 23, if you are experiencing issues with reception, return the phone if you don't like the problem. You have thirty days. That's why I don't understand the lawsuits, yes I know (some) lawyers are greedy. But the judge should throw those out since they fall within the thirty day period.

Btw I'm pretty happy with my new iPhone. I had an issue with the screen and apple replaced it.

Steve in California

July 15, 2010 11:02 PM

Congratulations, mainstream media. You have apparently gone outside of The Church of Apple long enough to discover that 1) Apple products do sometimes have defects, and 2) Apple lies to cover that fact up.

Phil

July 15, 2010 11:14 PM

If you do not like your iPhone THEN TAKE IT BACK AND GET YOUR MONEY BACK! BUT HURRY UP TIME IS RUNNING OUT. After you do so crawl back into the deep hold you came out of.

If not go and get a bumper or order one! Fix the problem your self and leave Steve alone so he can create more and better iPhones.

PFT!

Robert Silver

July 16, 2010 3:18 AM

I find over reactions in some of these comments to be just that and I question as to the authenticity of some. We have had the iPhone4 at home and using it with no problems. I work in an office full of early adopters and no one has mentioned any issues around the iPhone4 and there are probably 20-30 in my office alone. Yes Apple needs to do something, but some of the comments here appear to indicate that the grass could be greener somewhere else. The answer is - it's not! My wife has moved from a Nokia N900 to an iP4 and she feels like her quality of life has advanced 10 fold.

SS

July 16, 2010 3:43 AM

iPhone 4 technical glitch only goes to show that "Murphy's Law" really works! One of the clauses of this law states:
"If you think everything is just going on fine, you have most probably overlooked something really small but all the more important detail".

Besides, does anyone remember the time, when the dreaded "blue screen" appeared while Bill Gates was launching a new version of Windows OS years ago?
Or do people remember the time when the prestigious luxury car maker's Mercedes Benz A- series small car rolled over and turned topsy-turvy on every sharp turn?

So, such technical faults can happen to even the world's most respected brands. The solution to the problem is to frankly admit the flaw and do whatever is necessary to placate customers. Rapid damage control actions are the answer. It's a lot cheaper.

Matt

July 16, 2010 7:38 AM

Mr Schumer needs to know his place. Seems that he thinks his political commentary is necessary or even wanted. Others of his ilk apparently view politics as a universal cure.

Mr. Schumer, kindly keep your comments to yourself.

Steve

July 16, 2010 10:26 AM

This is bunk you only have the problem if you are holding the bottom left corner. I don't actually have one I have the 3Gs, however I know several people that do own the 4 and it's one of those "now that I know, I don't have any problems". Granted these are people with college degrees and have a job, so don't have time to obsess over easily avoidable issues.

Even

July 16, 2010 12:40 PM

I agree with every commit excepth the on above about Microsoft and apple in the way they handle turmoil...I have a iPhone 4 and I'll say evey problem I've had with the phone when brougth to the apple store is denied in everyway not be there fault...came to to point where I threatened to just ask for a refund and they were reluctant to give that until I point out the new 30 day refund policy...at the end of the day apple went public in saying it wasn't their fault and are only trying to remedy the situation after all the backlass and the 7% drop in apple stock since the iPhone realese...this company makes good products but is only finically motivated and don't really care about the consumer.
One thing I'll give Microsoft is when they have a faulty product they take full responsibility...and don't let it get this far I really can't think of and instance where I've owned a Microsoft product that was faulty and didn't own up to it.

John

July 16, 2010 3:10 PM

I purchased the iphone 4 on June 24 and absolutely love it!! No problems whatsoever, but I have had a bumper on it the entire time.

Ryan

July 17, 2010 9:28 AM

It's amazing how badly iPhone 4 sucks. It's also amazing how Apple Fanboys will defend it until the end of time. I will freely note first off that I am not a fanboy by any stretch, however I do have the 3GS, which I love. I did buy the iPhone 4, and it was so terrible that I returned it and went back to my current 3GS. It was just that bad. It's hilarious to me what Apple fanboys are saying in forums and blogs all across the web, defending this thing like it's some sacred gem, pretending all its issues don't even exist. Ridiculous. Check out the video I made on YouTube about "An Apple Fanboy's take on Life...". It's at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KPcQ-cYg8iA

rfengineer

July 19, 2010 1:35 AM

RF and Wireless System Engineers of the world rejoice.

It is very exciting to see the CEO of Apple Computers to suffer the indignities of having to tell its customers that "you should hold this phone like this, yes like this, but not like that, and oh not like that" as he twists and turns his body, wrist, and the phone in multiple configurations like a talented contortionist.

It is simply bad RF product design, admit it, and fix it! Instead, Apple is recommending to its customers a newly redesigned phone, just that it is a really cheapened version of the phone, i.e., a phone with a new shell, or a new phone with additional unheard-of hand positioning requirements.

I have long wondered how Apple could have gotten away with no wireless expertise or with really bad expertise and still succeed in the wireless world by a pretty face. Now we have the answer. It was just lucky.

The problem would have been found within 3 months of live air user tests, or the KPIs (Key Performance Indicator) would have been trending high that no one could have explained. Apple either had no live air facilities or that no one was skilled enough to know what was going to hit them. The fanciful, futuristic looking test chambers that Apple is supposedly showing the world, unless something lies beyond the surface, is just that, a fancy designed to again fool the world that its beautiful face equates knowledge and expertise. What Apple needs is a generic live-air user network that its own employees can "eat the dog food", literally, now of the iPhone 4. A team of engineers shall be there to constantly monitor its KPIs before any new product can be market launched.

This episode should teach Apple, that this is now millions of devices, today, already in the field, a real handset issue that cannot even be side-stepped on the network side. From the scant evidence we have, it appears that there is some incorrect RSSI measurement in the device, that should be fixable through a SW upgrade. If not fixed, it will likely consume or emit more power than it is necessary in a 3G UMTS system, which either leads to dropped calls of this phone or other phones because of the additional interference, or degraded performance in data throughput.

However the more worrying is the problem arising from the "Human Flesh Capacitor" feature that the open antenna design seems to enable. So this eventually still has to be a recall, as the devices in the field cannot be repaired. Nevertheless, once root-cause analyzed (RCA), the problem should still be relatively easy to fix in manufacturing because it seems a shield of some sort of the antenna is working quite effectively, whereas modern materials technology has much spare capacity to allow some kind of, even translucent, cover being applied on the antenna, while retaining much of the antenna gain that the new design is supposed to provide. In fact, today's phones have a 0dB gain, and the Apple phone should still have much better gain compared to the competition.

(I would not be surprised some other vendor is already experimenting with the Apple antenna and covering it in some thin material to avoid that same fate.)


In the meanwhile, a day Apple is in denial, I can only imagine that Nokia, Huawei, Motorola, partying like there is no tomorrow.

The curious thing is what AT&T was doing. It felt like they had been intoxicated by Apple's device successes and were just asleep at the wheel; this is definitely not the AT&T Wireless I know of or any other tier-1 carrier. I can just imagine AT&T is now going back to 2 years worth of data, as the phone being designed and tested, and trying to find all the dropped call cases that were not RCA'ed (Root-Cause Analyzed).

The Apple CEO even suffered additional indignity of shouting to the world that the KPI will only deteriorate by 1%. Good heavens! Some boys in AT&T have their pay linked to the Dropped Call KPI, at the 0.1% granularity, and they will be getting a pay-cut. Not Steve Jobs, of course. In the meanwhile, AT&T will have to drop the ads claiming to be the most reliable network in America, that now belongs to Verizon.

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A blog on the daily doings of Apple and the many companies in its orbit, with insight and analysis by two longtime Apple-watchers Bloomberg Businessweek Senior Writer Peter Burrows and Bloomberg Businessweek.com Senior Technology Writer Arik Hesseldahl.

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