The Apple Store Fitted Me for a $15,000 Watch I Could Never Afford
This morning, I made a 30-minute appointment at the Apple store for a “fitting” of the Apple Watch Edition—a gadget which starts at $10,000. I could never afford one, much less the $15,000 watch I actually tried. Apple didn’t seem to mind.
From the
beginning, I found myself surprisingly uneasy about walking into a store
and pretending I could afford such a thing. These are devices that
Apple designed for the very, very wealthy. Each face of the watch is milled out of a solid block of 18k yellow or rose gold that is proprietary to Apple. Even the pin you clasp on the back of your wrist is made of 18k gold. It’s a little unnerving.
The process
of trying one on is carefully coordinated over a 30 minute window, in
which you’re taken to a special area of the store, away from the chaos.
And even though I knew I shouldn’t care, I felt like Happy Gilmore
walking onto the putting green wearing a Bruins jersey and food-stained
sweatpants when I approached the Apple greeter. But as it turned out,
that didn’t really matter.
My “Fitting”
Rather than
pretend I had $15k to throw around, I had decided to be honest about
the fact that I had no intention of buying an Edition. When I did, the
employees seemed perfectly ok with it.
I was asked
to stand near the tables where dozens of Apple Watches were lined up
under glass, rotating through an ad hoc demo reel of different features.
Buzzing around these tables were people who had reserved “fittings” of
the regular Watch (made of steel) or the aluminum Watch Sport. Apple
Store employees would take out the watch that the customer asked
for—careful to polish its screen and case with a microsuede towel—and
let them try any number of different band options.
After a few
minutes, I was introduced to the very kind employee who would be
showing me the Edition. He led me over to a secluded area of the store
near the laptops, where a special station had been set up for these
appointments. There, a Watch screen hooked up to an iPad walked me
through different features—they didn’t just hand me one. I was invited
to pick out which version I wanted to try on a neighboring laptop. I
chose the large 42mm 18-karat yellow gold case with a black leather band
and a classic buckle, which retails for $15,000.
That’s when
I noticed a guy in khakis and a polo shirt emblazoned with a private
security firm’s logo standing behind us, who I learned would be
responsible for retrieving the appropriate watch and returning it after I
was done. My Watch appeared, and my guide took it out of its leather
box, inviting me to take as many pictures and videos as I wanted. Then,
he carefully put it on my wrist himself—part of protocol.
At first, I
felt weird gawking at the ridiculous chunk of precious metal and
circuitry strapped to my wrist while snapping shots, but he was
encouraging and not at all condescending about it.
Perhaps that’s because there wasn’t much to actually do with the Apple Watch Edition except
ooh and ahh about the glorious fit and finish of the device. Given how
dependent it is on you and your contacts it was tough to get a sense of
some of the watch’s features, or get a realistic look at how this thing
truly functions in tandem with an iPhone. The watches ran demo loops
which cycled through a number of the different screens where you could
interact with some of the features. Not everything was functional but
feeling the Taptic Engine recreate a heartbeat against my wrist was
pretty fascinating.
The entire
“fitting” experience is just that: An experience. It’s Apple’s Haute
Couture, and it doesn’t have quite as much to do with the innards of the
watch at this point. I know what the surprising weight of the Apple
Watch Edition feels like on my wrist, and I know what the soft silicone
band looks like against my pasty skin. But I still don’t know what it’s
like to use it.
Watching the Watches
After a few
minutes of fiddling, I took the watch off. My patient guide told me
that I still had 15 minutes left in my appointment, so why not try
another version? The rose gold with a classic white Sport band, starting at $12,000, maybe? So out went the security guard and back he came with another treasure box.
By the time
we were finished, Apple had spent 30 minutes of several employees’ time
showing me a product I could never afford. But there has to be a reason
why anyone—anyone! even me!—can walk into one of Apple’s stores and try
on a $15k watch. Here’s what occurs to me: by putting it on wrists,
regardless if those wrists are able to fork over the cash, the Edition
is helping Apple sell its less expensive little brothers.
Take the
Burj Khalifa: A wildly expensive loss leader that helped stimulate sales
of the more affordable neighborhood that surrounds it. Very few people
could afford to live in the Burj. Many more can afford a view. Likewise,
very few people can afford a gold Edition, but they might end up taking
home a consolation prize in the form of a Sport made of aluminum. Or
maybe they’ll just help boost hype with an Instagram pic or a blog post
about how accessible and unpretentious the Apple Store is about its most
expensive product.
In this
sense, these “fittings” give us a look at what Apple might try to
accomplish now that existing products like the iPhone are taken for
granted. Selling a watch is considerably more difficult than selling a
phone—not everyone wants or needs one, and even fewer are willing to
stand in line for a tiny box that looks identical to millions of others.
By turning a trip to the Apple Store into an aspirational experience
where you can literally touch the upper echelon of luxury technology,
Apple is venturing into new territory to sell its riskiest product
release yet.
Will it get
people to buy watches? Go get a fitting yourself, and see if you like
how you look. But don’t worry about getting all dressed up.
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