Customers are not only enthusiastic, but also passionate about Apple's products even though they are priced higher than competitors. Some staunch Apple fans surprised Cook at the store launch in Mumbai
Mumbai-based Purav Mehta, who works with job portal Indeed as a lead, global product solution, with their India team, is a hardcore Apple fan and currently owns 29 Apple products. “I have a MacBook, iPod, iPad, AppleTV, iPhone, Apple Watch, AirPods and a HomePod. Additionally, if I count accessories like MagSafe chargers and their cases and watch straps, I own 35-plus products. Among them iPhone 3GS is the oldest. Apple has launched 26 models of the iPhone till the 14 series and of these, I have used about 13 or so personally (holding some, traded in some),” he says.
No wonder then that he camped outside the Apple BKC store for 15 hours waiting to be the first customer to walk in when Apple opened its first store in India on April 18.
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“I was the first in line and when I reached closer to Mr Cook, I saw him putting his hands up for a high five and then I shook hands with him and politely told him I’m a big fan of Apple, him and Steve Jobs,” recalls the 30-year-old. “I thanked him for this opportunity to be able to experience the Apple Store in India, and in return he said, ‘No, I thank you for coming and attending the opening’,” adds Mehta, who also carried his iPod Touch (5th Gen)—manufactured by Apple in September 2013—and got it signed by Tim Cook and Apple’s head of retail Deirdre O’Brien. Mehta had bought the iPod from an online marketplace for around Rs 12,000 almost a decade ago and counts it among his invaluable possessions.
It’s brand loyalty that Apple has built over the years where customers are not just enthusiastic but also passionate about its products even though they are priced higher than its competitors. Since its inception in 1976, Apple has continued to surprise its fans with products that have gone from the Mac, iPod and iPhone to AirPods, iWatch, iPad and more.
At the opening, however, it was 52-year-old Sajid Moinuddin’s turn to surprise Apple CEO Tim Cook by walking in carrying a vintage Macintosh SE, which was launched back in 1987. “Oh my God, you still have this!” Cook told Moinuddin who had been waiting outside the store since six in the morning, carefully holding the eight-kilo computer. Both Cook and O’Brien autographed it, with the latter recollecting that she started her career with Apple, scheduling the production lines for early Mac products.