How Apple gets you to touch their computers
In a clever bit of salesmanship, Apple angles the screens on the laptops in the Apple Store just enough that you can see the screen but not enough for comfortable viewing. Here’s why:
The point, explains Carmine Gallo, who is writing a book on the inside workings of the Apple Store, is to get people to touch the devices. “The main reason notebook computers screens are slightly angled is to encourage customers to adjust the screen to their ideal viewing angle,” he says โ “in other words, to touch the computer.”
A tactile experience with an Apple product begets loyalty to Apple products, the thinking goes โ which means that the store exists to imprint a brand impression on visitors even more than it exists to extract money from them. “The ownership experience is more important than a sale,” Gallo notes. Which means that the store โ and every single detail creating the experience of it โ are optimized for customers’ personal indulgence. Apple wants you to touch stuff, to play with it, to make it your own.
It’s a genius touch. I went in to the Apple Store last week just after it opened to see the new MacBook Airs and retina MacBook Pros and I’ll be damned if I didn’t have to adjust the screen in both cases. Get out of my head, man! (via @alexismadrigal)
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