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News

News from Elf, a digital creative agency at the intersection of the arts and sciences.

Filtering by Category: Apps

Starling Bank, a Digital Disruptor, Makes Mobile Only Banking a Strong Possibility For Our Digital Future

Elf

As financial technology continues to evolve to meet consumer needs, Starling Bank CEO Anne Boden suggests that mobile-only banks are the wave of the future.

Image via Starling Bank

Image via Starling Bank

The big banks are increasing their cost base all the time, and they won’t be able to compete because our cost of delivery here is very low.
— Anne Boden, Starling Bank CEO
Image via Starling Bank

Image via Starling Bank

Taking an innovative approach to consumer banking, London-based Starling Bank www.starlingbank.com offers digital, mobile-only banking services. The bank operates current accounts, business banking and a payments service scheme for merchants. Founded by former Allied Irish Banks COO, Anne Boden, in January 2014, Starling Bank is a licensed and regulated bank that offers convenient and easy to use banking services via its mobile app. Part of a growing group of “challenger banks,” Starling Bank aims to simplify personal financial management, help customers cut down on unnecessary fees, save more and be financially prepared through better planning and real-time updates on spending habits.

How does Starling Bank work?

Starling Bank issues the customer with a Contactless Mastercard debit card. You can control your entire account through an app on your phone. The app stays focused on the essentials with a clear, minimalist design and easily accessible tabs to view other features. These features include making payments, adding or withdrawing money, transferring money and keeping tabs on your daily spending habits updated in real time.

  • Pay: Regular payment features along with the ability to transfer your current standing orders from your old brick and mortar bank.

  • Add money: Add money (max £250 per day currently) to your account or transfer as much as you like using ‘Faster Payments’ and online banking.

  • Spending: A real-time record of your spending habits with advice for areas where you can save.

Security features include completing a customer’s initial registration with a video and photo-ID, the ability to deactivate a card with just a push of a button, real-time updates of financial transactions and notifications for any unusual activity.

Image via Starling Bank

Image via Starling Bank

In 2018, four-year old mobile bank, Starling Bank won Best British Bank and Best Current Account 2018 for its personal account. Self-described as banking for ‘mobile living,” Starling Bank offers money management tools, flexible card controls and 24/7 customer service support all through its app and on the go. The personal account for instance, helps customers keep track of their spending habits similar to Mint.com or other financial planning apps, manage overdrafts and more. Your account is fully accessible via the app. Starling Bank also offers a fully functional, contactless Mastercard debit card, options for direct deposit and works with Apple Pay, Google Pay, Samsung Pay and Fitbit Pay. Protected by the FSCS, Starling Bank follows all necessary banking regulations and is fully licensed by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) and Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA). Starling Bank does not operate any physical branches and costs significantly less to operate than traditional banks. The bank has noticeably fewer fees and does not penalize customers for declined transactions, like traditional banks. Starling Bank operates solely from its mobile app.

Mobile-Only Challenger Sparks a Digital Banking Revolution

Image via Starling Bank

Image via Starling Bank

Any doubts as to the bank’s lasting power were removed when membership shot up from 50,000 to 400,000 in the United Kingdom in 2018. Growth in 2019 is expected to top over 1 million, putting it on par with competitor Monzo. Starling Bank is looking to expand in Europe, starting with France and Germany first. Starling Bank has reassured customers worried about the outcome of Brexit that they will still be operational and fully functional. Previously, the bank had stated that it would establish a subsidiary in Ireland ahead of Britain's departure from the European Union. The bank already has employees outside the U.K. and expects to more than double its workforce in 2019. Starling Bank also services 20 large clients including the U.K. government, other banks and corporations via its Payment Services.

Competitor challenger banks like Monzo have announced their intentions to expand into the United States. Tandem, another challenger bank, obtained Harrod’s banking license last year and has launched its own product, a cash back credit card. Nonetheless, these start up banks, despite their growth plans, remain behind Starling Bank by a long stretch. Starling Bank has been expanding its integrations and partnerships with an expected 25 new partners, including PensionBee, Flux, Wealth Simple, Habito, Kasko and Soldo. Soldo for example, is a fintech that helps manage business team expenses, and integrates into Starling Payments Services Division, providing access to the UK’s Faster Payments.

Satisfying Unmet Business Needs

[Starling Bank’s business solution] is free, uncomplicated and quick, taking the effort out of banking so our customers can spend more time growing their business, and less with their bank.
— Anne Boden, Starling Bank CEO

Starling Bank also is committed to offering consumers business options as well, that include micro businesses, an area that is often underserved. The bank announced its intention in October 2018 and delivered on its promise by March 29 of this year. The bank allows consumers to open an account in less than ten minutes, right from their smartphones. There are no fees to have an account, make a payment to another bank account or to withdraw cash. Business customers can do their entire banking right from the mobile app.

Customers can make payments to suppliers from the app. This includes international payments. Customers can see monthly breakdown of transactions, organized by categories and export transactions to their accounting software. They can also plan out cash flow for taxes and other expenses via the “Goals” feature. Customers will also receive instant notifications when they receive money into their account. While its partner list continues to grow, Starling Bank offers business customers access to chosen partners for accounting and invoicing platforms, such as Xero via its in-app Marketplace.

Cash is very costly. Banks charge businesses a huge amount of money for using cash.
— Anne Boden, CEO, Starling Bank

Expanding Across the EU

The bank expects to offer new products and services this year, beginning with Euro accounts for UK residents. 3,500 customers are on the waiting list to set up such accounts. Starling Bank also intends to offer credit cards and expand lending options in 2019. The bank already has a single euro payments area license, which allows it to carry out direct debit and card payments and transfers across the EU.

Similar to a growing number of banks in the United States such as Ally Bank, Schwab and others that offer online checking and savings accounts only with less fees than traditional banks, Starling Bank prides itself on cutting down on costs without physical branches. The bank aims to offer the “best mobile-only personal current account in the world.”

Starling Bank offers same-day cash deposits and withdrawals for its customers through the 11,500 branches of the Post Office - a convenience not available among American online banks, along with real-time updates on spending habits and the ability to control overdrafts.

Image via Starling Bank

Image via Starling Bank

Benefits Include:

  • Immediacy and ease of use

  • Real-time financial insights and personal money management to improve and manage spending habits

  • No additional fees like traditional banks

  • Offers cash deposit and withdrawal services at the post office’s 115,000 locations

  • Safe and secure

  • Fully licensed by the FCA and PRA

  • An account up and running in 20 minutes

  • Goal-setting options

  • Tips on how to increase savings

  • Lock and unlock the debit card from the app

  • Physical card mailed to customer

  • Round Up feature to automatically add money to savings Goals

  • Direct Debits conveniently appear in the day before they are due.

Starling’s Marketplace showcases competitive insurance, pension and mortgage plans via its partnerships with third-party financial technology companies.

From the Big Bank Bailout of the 2008 Recession

In October 2008, just one month after the Lehman Brothers collapsed in the United States, British PM Gordon Brown announced an unprecedented yet essential plan to bail out the biggest banks in the United Kingdom. Up to £45 billion of taxpayers’ money went to the Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS). In order to receive such aid, RBS had to agree with the European Commission to create a £425 million Capability and Innovation fund that would encourage competition.

Starling Bank is one of 11 challenger banks competing for these funds. Just four years old, Starling Bank has already made a name for itself and is challenging banking’s industry giants for a share of the retail banking market. The bank raised £48 million in January 2016 and put out its first accounts in July of that year. A full history of the bank’s growth is available on its website. Founder Anne Bolen has been awarded a Member of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire (MBE), among many other notable awards.

As the recession wreaked havoc in England and all over the world, Boden noticed that banks could not operate in the same way that they had prior to the crisis occurring. As shared in an interview with New Statesman, Boden revealed that she thought it was not “acceptable to fine customers when they went into unauthorized overdrafts. It was no longer acceptable to charge customers for returning a direct debit.”

Boden had started her financial career in traditional banking at Lloyd’s in the 1980s after studying computer science in Swansea. As big banks failed to adapt after the financial crisis, Boden decided to step away and to learn more about fintech. She returned to banking as the chief operating officer (COO) of Allied Irish Bank and helped the bank streamline its operations, increase efficiency and return it to profitability. Prior to launching Starling Bank, Boden also held top leadership positions in the financial industry as Head of EMEA (Global Transaction Banking) for RBS, Executive Vice President for ABN AMRO and Vice President for UBS.

As the years passed, Boden became convinced that traditional banks were not going to make any dramatic changes for consumers and that it was time to build something from scratch from the ground up, in order to be truly transformative. Boden decided to create a new digital bank by January 2014. It was not easy to transition and Boden found herself ostracized for thinking differently and that her peers and colleagues in the financial industry were more concerned with defending their ways of doing things instead of adapting to a changing mobile population.

I was a computer scientist, I was a woman, but I was also an ex-banker, and that was just as difficult.
— Anne Boden, CEO, Starling Bank in interview with New Statesman

One of Starling’s main competitors is Monzo, a challenger launched in 2015 by Starling’s former CEO, Tom Blomfield. While Monzo offers pre-paid debit cards, Starling offers more banking features that customers are used to having at their banks such as personal and now business account set up, transfers, payments, cash deposits and cash withdrawals. Starling Bank also offers Current Account Switching (CAS) and provides services to other fintechs and the U.K. Department for Work and Pensions, thus having more than one revenue source.

While Starling Bank does not bear the same risks as large traditional banks with a big footprint and physical offices, the bank still faces regulatory demands like any other bank. The Minimum Requirement for Own Funds and Eligible Liabilities (MREL) is a fund established after the 2008 financial crisis to require all banks to have a certain amount of capital on hand to ensure that they never had to be bailed out again. This capital requirement can limit some growth.

In her interview with New Statesman, Boden pointed out how Starling Bank does not charge for declined transactions and that the entire process was automated with incremental costs. The process is the same for big banks, but they continue to charge customers high fees as they can get away it. Starling Bank does not charge customers fees for using their debit card abroad. The bank does not have a monthly cap on free overseas card transactions or cash withdrawals.

The U.K. banking industry has been undergoing some recent updates with a plan by the FAC to revamp how banks charge customers for overdrafts. Starling Bank already meets these requirements.

While Starling Bank’s banking app and competitors in the fintech space also are building services to meet the needs of Millennials, the majority of professionals in the fintech industry are in their 30s and 40s. This may change in the years to come.

Image via Starling Bank

Image via Starling Bank

Fast Forward to Today: Open Banking, Open APIs and More

Starling Bank offers both iOS and Android apps. The bank was the first UK bank to offer in-app provisioning for Apple Pay. All Starling Bank mobile apps also offer in-app chat with customer service representatives. Since its inception, Starling Bank has been PSD2-compliant, meeting EU security requirements for open data sharing via open APIs. Open APIs essentially mean that a customer can give someone else permission to see your data.

Customers can share their financial data through APIs, via platforms called aggregators that allow other financial providers to view and then offer specific, tailored products. Bigger banks such as HSBC have attempted to buy this to ensure control of the process, and prevent new competition. Many of these banks are now beginning to imitate Starling Bank’s banking features.

Image via Starling Bank

Image via Starling Bank

The Future of Banking

In a sign of how modern this company is, Starling Bank considers itself both a bank and technology company, focusing on its developers and technology services, running its own hackathon and offering developer support via a podcast. Starling Bank has shared its commitment to providing customers with smart money management tools. The bank and its CEO are keenly aware of the growing digitization of consumer lives with tools that offer personalization, recommendations and research insight for consumers. The bank wants to meet and anticipate consumer needs to provide the most relevant, actionable and meaningful data insight for each individual user in real time. Starling Bank is exploring tools like machine learning to provide better, personalized insights direct to customers that customers alone will be able to access.

Given the bank’s lower cost base, Starling Bank is able to make rapid updates using its modern technology framework that can adapt quickly to new retail and business banking needs. The bank expects to be profitable by 2020. Starling Bank also compensates account holders by paying interest on current accounts.

Unlike traditional big banks that rely upon outdated infrastructure and older IT systems that need to be overhauled to keep up with new agile updates in a mobile-first world, Starling bank aims to always keep ease of access and rapid technology at the forefront of its banking. Thus the bank can consistently offer its customers the best deals and value.

While the bank is fairly new, Starling Bank is gaining momentum and growing at lightning speed. While competition heats up among the new fintech challenger banks, one thing is clear - banking in the 21st century is changing after the 2008 recession and banks that care about providing their customers with the best experience, fair fees, transparency, lowered costs and complete mobile access, are poised to win by a large margin.


As the App Store Turns 10, We Take A Look Back

Elf

The App Store opened July 10, 2008, transforming the way we communicate, work, play and learn. 

Image via Apple

Image via Apple

App store.jpeg

Over the last ten years, the App Store has revolutionized the world, introducing the concept of apps, democratizing software distribution and igniting innovation. Today there are customers in over 155 countries worldwide and over $100 billion has been paid out to developers. 

Apps themselves are a global phenomenon, in use by people of all ages and backgrounds.

 

Apps have become part of the daily lives of people all over the world, and an essential part of their personal goals, play and productivity. This revolution continues today.

Creating a Safe, Trusted App Marketplace

Prior to the launch of the App Store, the software industry was dominated by a few powerful players. An individual software developer could not put out his or her own software as the cost of distribution was too high to compete with the big players. The App Store changed all of this, allowing anyone whether they were a single developer, a small studio or large company, put out a custom app of their own design and reach customers all over the world. The App Store opened the door for any developer.

The App Store also emphasized consumer privacy and set up guidelines for developers to ensure this and a security process for app submissions. This protected consumers and ensured that the App Store was a safe marketplace for consumers, while providing them with an excellent experience as well. Over the years, the App Store has added categories and different ways to discover and access apps. The App Store has become enormously successful over the years and by June 2018, had paid out $100 billion to developers.

Last year, Apple unveiled its new App Store, with dedicated Games and Apps tabs to help customers find what they were looking for and other features to encourage discovery and access to new apps. The Today tab also spotlights compelling app stories. Customers can now also learn more about the people who created apps they love to use. These stories have been read by over 1 million people and that number continues to grow. The App Store itself sees over 500 million visitors per week who now spend more time exploring and discovering new apps.

Inspiring New Mobile-First Businesses and the App Economy

The App Store and the popularity of the iPhone in 2007 and iPad soon after in 2010, led to the rise of new mobile-first businesses. The App Store inspired new ideas and opened the doors for individual advancement through app companies, solo entrepreneurs and smaller studios. The iPhone ignited business transformation in the ways people communicate, work, learn and play and the App Store laid down the foundation for using 'apps.' A new method of sharing information was born - apps. Apps could serve any industry.

Over its 10 years so far, the App Store has developed into the richest, most diverse, and most accessible software ecosystem the world has ever seen.
— Marco Arment, developer of Overcast

The App Store empowered many people all over the world to be successful and creative in ways that had never been achieved before.

How Customers Interact with Business

In the last 10 years, apps have become an important method of customer interaction with businesses. Apps help people in their everyday lives, from personal motivation and fitness to paying bills, shopping, booking hotels, paying for flights or making dinner reservations. In most aspects of a person's life, there's an app for that.

Billion Dollar Startups Influence Existing Businesses To Build Apps

Several startups ranging from Instagram, Uber, Lyft and Instacart used iPhone features such as the built-in camera, Apple Pay, GPS and Location Services to provide their customers with personalized, on-demand experiences. Their businesses began as apps in the App Store. Their success and popularity among customers also led to the development of apps from existing web-based businesses such as Facebook, AirBnB and Amazon.

In 2016, there were 83,000 app releases per month. While this number has slowed down, the number of app updates has skyrocketed. By November 2017 with the launch of the new iPhone X, there were 477,000 app updates per month so that apps can remain relevant to users. On average, an app is updated 1.4 times per month. Games, business and utility apps are the most popular apps to make among developers.

Gaming

Since its launch, the App Store has been the most popular marketplace for games, from new games such as Angry Birds to favorites such as Pokémon Go, Pac-Man and Super Mario Run, a new experience based on the popular Super Mario game by Nintendo.

We are very happy that we are able to deliver Super Mario Run, a new Super Mario experience that could be played with just one hand on iPhone, to hundreds of millions of consumers because of the App Store. The App Store allows us to share the joy of Nintendo games with many new audiences, and we will continue striving to provide unique and new game experiences to App Store customers.
— Shigeru Miyamoto, Nintendo

 

The App Store also brought gaming mainstream, largely in part due to the ease of use of Multi-Touch technology on both the iPhone and iPad and being able to play on the go. 

We built our entire team around the App Store, and we’ve been able to have millions of people around the world play our games who never would have considered themselves gamers. The App Store refresh has shown players the creators behind the apps they enjoy everyday. Humanizing apps can only be a good thing and showcasing how they’re made will inspire the next generation of creators from every corner of the world.
— Dan Gray, head of studio, ustwo Games, creators of Monument Valley

Subscriptions

Subscriptions has offered a way for developers and companies to earn income from apps. Customers are able to first try out the apps with a free version and then pay to unlock different levels of functionality. $1 billion was paid out to developers from IAP and paid apps by June 2010.

Streaming Video and Entertainment on the Go

Watching TV shows, movies and video on the go has been growing worldwide and the App Store has been at the forefront of this, as customers love to watch videos using their iPhones and iPads. Today there are many service providers such as HBO, Netflix, Sling TV and Hulu that provide high quality shows for customers anywhere, anytime.

When we decided to introduce HBO NOW, there was never a question that our exclusive launch partner had to be Apple. Announcing the streaming service with Apple and the arrival of HBO NOW on the App Store is one of the most significant moments in HBO’s storied history.
— Richard Plepler, chairman and CEO, HBO

Education

Apps have also unlocked new ways to learn, be productive and to create, especially with the launch of the iPad in 2010. Today there are over 1.3 million apps for the iPad. Apple also launched  Swift Playgrounds, an iPad app to teach coding concepts for students of all ages to learn Apple's own coding language, Swift. Apple has also supported learning and education through its own free labs and workshops at Apple Stores with Today at Apple, Everyone Can Code initiatives and through the WWDC annual event

Health and Fitness Apps

The App Store has also helped advance innovation in health and fitness with medical apps and health monitoring capabilities built into the iPhone such as HealthKit and Apple Watch. This has also inspired customers to be more mindful of their health and to be more active. Over 500 doctors and medical researchers have used Apple’s ResearchKit and CareKit software tools for clinical studies on topics varying from autism and Parkinson’s disease to post-surgical at-home rehabilitation and physical therapy.

Over the last 10 years, the App Store has contributed to the advancement of innovation in patient care by creating a platform for state-of-the-art medical apps like Corrie at Johns Hopkins. Our mobile health research relies on the App Store to deliver life-saving and life-changing apps to our patients.
— Francoise A. Marvel, MD, Corrie Health Team, John Hopkins University

What Lies Ahead: Augmented Reality

Augmented Reality (AR) became available to users practically overnight with the launch of iOS 11 in 2017, making the App Store the largest AR platform in the world. AR enables creators to bring virtual experiences into the real world. This is transformative and changes the way customers play and work. ARKit continues to grow and evolve with the latest iteration allowing shared experiences with multiple players for a game or project collaboration.

App usage is also growing into other areas, such as automotive displays and televisions. Apps have made a tremendous contribution to the quality of life for people all over the world, while providing a personalized individual experience. Having apps on an iPhone removes the need for an immediate pen and paper, carrying an additional camera or laptop for messaging and quick email. Apps opened the door to portability and new ways of interacting with people and the environment.

We are excited to create, design and engineer apps for our clients for the iOS ecosystem from iPhones and iPads to Macs, Apple Watches, Apple TV and Car Play. Thanks for reading!

How the iPhone Reinvented Business

Elf

From Apps to Music, Apple's iPhone Transformed How We Do Business and How We Communicate

SteveJobs_iPhone
Every once in a while, a revolutionary product comes along that changes everything...Today, Apple is going to reinvent the phone.
— Steve Jobs, Apple Inc.

On June 29th this year, Apple celebrated the 10th year of the iPhone. In just 10 years, the iPhone has radically altered the world. When Steve Jobs announced the launch of the iPhone at MacWorld in 2007, he called it revolutionary, saying that it would 'reinvent the phone' and would change everything. While there was a lot of hype surrounding its launch, the effect that the iPhone would have on business and communications, was surprisingly underestimated.

Before the iPhone, you had to carry a camera to take photos, use your laptop or desktop computer to write anything longer than a paragraph in an email with ease and call a cab by energetically waving your arms in front of traffic. After the launch of the iPhone, you could do all of that and much more on one single device. The iPhone offered intelligent and personalized options for you.


At the iPhone product launch in Jan 2007, Steve Jobs explained how revolutionary the new smartphone was.

This is a day I’ve been looking forward to for two and a half years. Every once in a while a revolutionary product comes along that changes everything. In 1984, Apple introduced the Macintosh and changed the computer industry. In 2001, the company introduced the iPod and changed the entire music industry.

Well, today we’re introducing three revolutionary products of this class. The first one is a widescreen iPod with touch controls. The second is a revolutionary mobile phone. The third is a breakthrough Internet communications device. But these are not three separate devices. This is one device. And we are calling it iPhone. Today Apple is going to reinvent the phone.
— Steve Jobs, Apple CEO and co-founder

A Bonafide Game Changer

The iPhone has turned out to truly be a game-changer for how hundreds of millions of people communicate all over the world. It has opened the door to accelerated learning and swift communication, transforming industries and become the platform from which so many new revolutionary companies (Airbnb, Instagram, Snapchat and Uber to name a few) have launched. It also has laid waste to other industries and demanded that both hardware and software companies deliver at a higher level for the consumer.

Apple's iPhone transformed the way we communicate on a daily basis. It ignited the rise of mobility and smartphone usage, while creating a personalized experience for every iPhone user. This remarkable consumer electronics device has had a massive impact upon mobility, computing, design, entertainment and the tech industry as a whole over the last decade. Let's take a closer look. 


Original iPhone 2007

Original iPhone 2007


Personalized User Experience

The iPhone revolutionized how we communicate by offering a single device that enabled you to make phone calls, listen to music, search the Internet, check your email, take and send photos and videos, get directions and more - all on one device. Singlehandedly, it eliminated the need for standalone music players, GPS devices, cameras, notepads and carrying your laptop with you. It simplified things that you do on a daily basis in one device in a personalized way, where you could decide what was relevant and what was not.

The iPhone turned your cell phone into so much more than just a way of making phone calls. You had information at your fingertips 24/7 anywhere you were. This prompt access informed your decisions and kept you connected wherever you were. The iPhone's ease of use paved the way for:

• Individual access and empowerment

• Touch interactivity

• Using an on-screen keyboard on the smartphone itself

• Fast adoption of software

• Fast adoption of cloud computing

• Fast adoption of social networking
 

Since the iPhone was easy to use unlike other smartphones available at the time, consumers immediately expected better quality in other products as well. Every smartphone company had to immediately adapt or die. Motorola, Palm and Windows Mobile lost sales immediately and even companies like Blackberry that had thrived on sales of their smartphone devices with tiny QWERTY keyboards to business executives, suffered a significant decline over time.  

While the iPhone and subsequent smartphones did not start social media, they popularized its use, especially apps like What's App, Instagram, Facebook Messenger, Snapchat and more. By the end of March this year, over 1.94 billion users checked into Facebook at least once a month.

More people spend time on their smartphones too, with as high as 73.8 hours/month per user in June 2016, according to comScore. Heavy mobile usage also has helped spur the growth of tech companies who benefit both from engagement and advertising. In 2007, there was only one tech company in the top five list of most valuable stock market companies. Today, Apple, Microsoft, Amazon, Alphabet (Google) and Facebook dominate earnings. Both Alphabet and Facebook get a lot of advertising revenue from mobile ads, with over 49% of Facebook's revenue in Q1 of 2017 from online advertising, just as the popular social media site reached over two billion users. This has also decimated established and traditional news companies that have not been able to compete as effectively on their own as advertisers switch to mobile ad spending with Alphabet and Facebook.

That activity has been a catalyst for the growing dominance of tech-industry titans. Alphabet Inc.'s Google and Facebook Inc. now get the bulk of their advertising revenue from mobile ads. Together with Apple, Microsoft Corp. and Amazon.com Inc., they are the five most valuable companies on the stock market today. 

iPhone in Rose Gold 2016

iPhone in Rose Gold 2016


Ignited Rise of Mobility and Use of Smartphones

Given how cumbersome existing smartphone devices were pre-iPhone, it was easy to understand why consumers failed to adopt them. They were not easy to use nor were they well designed. With the arrival of the iPhone, the stylus and add-on keyboard was eliminated and instead the whole device was touch-sensitive. The world of cell phones was changed forever and consumers now expected thinner phones, better quality screens, touch interaction and multiple functionality.

Businesses adopted iPhone usage rapidly, recognizing that their employees were already using iPhones. The iPhone dramatically changed the way people communicate, learn, play and work. With an iPhone in hand, an employee could work from home or be on site with a client and still have access to company data and be connected. The iPhone popularized the use of apps, web tools and mobility. In many companies, both the owners and CEOs wanted iPhones after seeing their employees using them. Businesses were thus forced to adapt, but quickly benefited from increased information flow and providing data in the field for their employees, using popular apps and web tools from Microsoft Office to Salesforce, IBM and SAP.

Prior to the launch of the iPhone, PC sales averaged 400 million a year. However as the iPhone's popularity spread, other smartphones also were developed and launched to provide information, productivity tools, communication and entertainment options. The PC market has continued to decline over the years, while tablets and smartphone usage has gone upwards. Many PC companies went out of business subsequently and the industry consolidated around major players such as HP, Lenovo, Dell, Acer and Apple. The iPhone's popularity and adoption made it easier to launch the iPad subsequently.

Telecom companies such as AT&T and Verizon also had to adapt, as consumers stepped away from traditional landlines and adopted smartphones. All of these companies now offer both information and entertainment options as well as data services. They have also aligned themselves with smartphone companies to keep consumers engaged. The payphone also has disappeared from most public spaces in the United States as smartphone usage has gone up. In the first year of the launch of the iPhone, wireless service revenue among the top U.S. carriers grew 5.9% in 2008, according to Fidelity Investments.

 


Catapulted Use of Apps and Launched a Billion Dollar New App Industry

Just a few days prior to the iPhone becoming available for purchase in July 2007, Steve Jobs announced that the new smartphone would support third-party applications through the Internet. This decision by Apple was tremendous, as it led to the development of a developer-led ecosystem and the birth of the app industry.

Prior to the iPhone, apps were classified as Web 2.0 tools and not in common use. With the launch of the App Store via an update to iTunes in July 2008, Apple introduced a new way to shop for information and entertainment with apps built by third-party developers. The App Store became a billion-dollar enterprise rapidly, supporting the creativity and works of app developers worldwide. Other platforms like Google and Microsoft had to adapt fast and build their own app stores as their consumers now wanted access to the same apps on their smartphone devices.

There were app stores before Apple's own App Store but they were not well designed and installing apps was problematic. With the App Store, you could quickly discover, purchase and install an app. It was easy to also uninstall an app at any time.

Apple insisted on high quality standards for all apps submitted to their App Store, ensuring both the integrity of their own brand as well as any apps coming through it. This in turn, built trust and helped in the rapid growth of the App Store. The App Store split revenue between Apple and developers and offered a new marketplace, building an entire new industry. By January 22, 2011, Apple had over 10 billion app downloads.

Now enterprising developers could reach consumers directly through apps they had designed and developed. Today the App Store has everything from fitness to games, information, shopping, entertainment and dating with a plethora of choices for every category. Bigger companies also benefit by being able to offer personalized service to their customers in a streamlined way. For example, an airline carrier can quickly provide flight check-in and information through their own app while restaurants can offer online ordering and banks are able to provide quick deposits without even going to an ATM.

Changes brought about by the launch of the App Store include:

• transformation of software distribution and usage

• new app economy

• accelerated learning

• launch of apps that revolutionized industries

Spawned Industry-Changing Apps

Apps like Airbnb, Uber, Instagram and Snapchat were built upon the popularity of the iPhone (that in turn, popularized smartphone usage) and revolutionized industries from rentals and real estate to transportation, photo sharing and messaging.

For example, Uber's entire business model is built upon having a smartphone. Both the driver and the passenger need a smartphone to use their app and book a ride.

Increased the Speed of Communication

Fast forward to today, and we have 10-year-old app developers! New generations are growing up in a post-iPhone and app world, where it is a seamless part of their lives. This has accelerated learning by young kids and adults as well. In fact, some third-world countries in Africa have made the leap to smartphone usage without going through the traditional telecommunications infrastructure setup common among more developed nations.

Accelerated the Use of Apps Elsewhere

The iPhone accelerated the use of apps everywhere, from your iPad to now your TV and car. Using a touch interface and on-screen keyboard has become familiar to consumers and this trend is only going up.

Popularized Use of Accelerometers, Orientation Sensors and Gorgeous Graphics

The first iPhone's built in accelerometer offered motion capabilities. Current models include gyroscope and compass as well that help create amazing effects. This has been adopted in many apps and also in gaming.

The gaming industry has also changed dramatically. Pre-iPhone, most games were limited to consoles. While console use is still popular, gaming apps are in high demand with touch-based gameplay. For example, Niantic's augmented reality-angled Pokémon Go alone has been downloaded over 750 million times while Nintendo's super popular Mario franchise had 500 million sales over its lifetime. Super Mario is now available in the App Store.

At the WWDC in June this year, Apple also shared its AR Kit for immersive app experiences.
 

iPhone 7

iPhone 7


Transformed the Music, Film and Video Industries

The iPhone made it easy to listen to music on the same device that you made phone calls from, checked your email, surfed the web and organized your day. It built upon the popularity of the iPod and made it easier to buy a single song instead of a whole album and also get recommendations for other music you might like.

With gorgeous graphics, the iPhone made it easier to watch movies on the go, providing a platform for video delivery. This in turn forced movie and television studios to expand distribution so that anyone could purchase, download and stream movies to their mobile devices. The iPhone also helped existing companies like YouTube (now part of Google), Netflix and Hulu reach more people and become powerhouses themselves.

 


Reinvented Map Usage and Camera Access

Prior to the iPhone, Garmin was the de facto favorite for maps. They enjoyed high sales and usage despite a price point of $700 and up in 2005. However, with the arrival of the iPhone, consumers could get directions right on their phone and navigate using this touch-friendly device. Garmin and other GPS providers were forced to branch out into other markets like wearables to survive as sales plummeted. Other smartphones (Android for example) have also developed enhanced mapping capabilities with voiceover options as well.

The iPhone and other smartphones have simultaneously made photo sharing more accessible and relevant, while dramatically altering the camera industry. Eastman Kodak went out of business while even digital cameras sales dropped 80% from 2009 to 2016. Interestingly enough, today photos are not printed as much but mostly posted, shared and tweeted. This in turn, impacted the rise of Snap Inc., the messaging app that had a $20 billion IPO.
 


Changing Apple Itself

One of the biggest and most transformative changes that the iPhone has had is on Apple itself, that has gone from being known as a computer company to just Apple Inc. While the iPhone remains one of its bestselling products with record profits and 1.3 billion iPhones sold per year, Apple has now built an entire ecosystem of related products and its supporting App store.

The iPhone truly changed the world and may be the world's most influential consumer electronics device ever. It changed the way people interact and even see the world. This year, marking its 10th anniversary, Apple is expected to launch an updated version of its iPhone in September or early fall. We're eager to see what comes next!