الأربعاء، 17 ديسمبر 2014

Oh Consumers! You Cannot Appeal to a Dead Body


Dr. Rashid AlSaadi
Businesses around the world innovate continuously not only in developing new products but in marketing their products to maximize profits. Consumers buy their goods and sustain such business ventures; But for how long?  
Before the eighties, companies competed for quality. Then, new philosophies entered the market: Sell cheaper with volumes and benefit from the "volumes of scale", followed by another marking philosophy that introduced new versions of the same products or software more frequently with new or enhanced features. These philosophies or marketing strategies have influenced consumers to the extent that consumers blindly plan a new replacement, just for the sake of using the new features of such new products. The features may warrant new first-time-buys, but definitely do not deserve replacing older products that are in full functional conditions.
Most of us are in need of communication devices, personal computers, software, machines or appliances. If all of these industries follow the above philosophies (which they do), the consumer is in trouble financially. What aggravates the consumer financial deprivation is today's consumer psychology. They are internet-connected. They need things immediately. Finally, Brands influence their buying behavior.
Moreover, the limited support for older products and the eventual closure of their support lines forcefully drives consumers to switch to or seriously consider buying these new goods.  In the eighties, Apple developed the Macintosh, but in the nineties it developed the PowerBook, the Power Macintosh and the iMac. Similarly, Microsoft developed Office 1.0. Almost every year since then, Microsoft would introduce a new version of Office. The iPhone has gone into similar trends, see Figure 1.
These business entities understand that selling products cannot sustain and maximize their profits. They have to exploit other means like extended-service, live chat, remote access, and repair.  
Figure 1: iPhone Timeline
Source: Author
The above discussion is taken further recently by the cloud technology. To represent an example of the software market, Adobe has switched from Creative Suite Product Line (used by designers and web developers) to Adobe Creative Cloud, a huge departure from its traditional model. This creative cloud move changed the "selling of a standalone package" to the "paying of a monthly fee service." Now, designers and web developers subscribe to Adobe Creative Cloud to use a package of programs over the cloud for a monthly fee. A product has been transferred into a service! Need is the mother of invention.   

Consumer's financial health cannot continue to sustain such deprivation. Consumers are exploited extensively. They have no consumers' rights when it comes to challenging business agglomerates. Most buyers know the above but they do not have the power to change it. They know that manufacturers can make reliable products that last for a better acceptable duration. They know that they should not be charged for the whole month but they should be charged reasonably for the service they used during the time the asked for it. Consumers succeeded to report false advertisements, failure of services, deceptive internet sales, and failure to deliver but for the above: Oh consumers! You cannot appeal to consumer protection's dead body or deaf ears in this issue.

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