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Twenty-four years ago today, Apple embarked on what many industry experts considered a risky venture that would ultimately transform not just the company's fortunes, but retail itself. On May 19, 2001, Apple opened its first retail store at Tysons Corner Center in Virginia, with Steve Jobs personally showing the press around the revolutionary space.

tysons-corner-old-apple-store.jpg
Tysons Corner Apple Store

Some 500 eager visitors lined up before dawn to experience the store's hardwood floors, bright lighting, and clean lines. The aesthetic drew comparisons to trendy clothing retailer Gap. Not surprising, given that Gap CEO Mickey Drexler had been on Apple's board for two years at that point.

The decision to enter brick-and-mortar retail came at a precarious time for Apple. With a market share hovering around 2.8%, the company was struggling to effectively showcase its products through third-party retailers, where Macs were often relegated to corners and staffed by clerks with minimal product knowledge.

Jobs believed Apple would never shed its "cult" image unless it could control the entire customer experience, right down to the moment of purchase. In Walter Isaacson's eponymous biography of the former Apple CEO, Jobs said: "Unless we could find ways to get our message to customers at the store, we were screwed."

On Target

To lead this vision, Jobs recruited Ron Johnson, who had transformed Target's image with his designer merchandise line. Together, they crafted the store concept in a secret warehouse prototype, refining every detail from the single-entrance layout to the revolutionary Genius Bar, inspired by Johnson's experiences at Ritz-Carlton hotels.

Apple's board initially balked at the idea, especially after Gateway had just closed 40 of its own stores and Apple's sales had dropped 29% the previous year. Industry analysts were even more skeptical: Channel Marketing analyst David Goldstein famously predicted Apple would be "turning out the lights on a very painful and expensive mistake" within two years.

Instead, by 2003, Apple recorded $3 million in profit per store, per quarter, with approximately 60,000 visitors at each location. In 2004, Apple Retail hit $1.2 billion, breaking the record for the fastest billion-dollar milestone in retail history.

Private tour of Tysons Corner with Steve Jobs

Today, Apple operates 534 stores across 27 countries, with each location generating approximately $5,500 per square foot annually – among the highest in the retail industry. What began as a controversial gamble has become a cornerstone of Apple's success and a blueprint for experiential retail that competitors continue to emulate.

Article Link: From Risky Bet to Retail Giant: Apple Store Turns 24 Today
 
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The best thing about Apple stores is being able to walk in if you ever have an issue and walking back out the issue fixed. No other retail store offers such a fast and high quality servicing for electronic devices.

I just wish their stores were a bit more inviting. They have such a sterile feel at times.
 
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Having them is great. But the staff are always dumb as a brick in their awareness of products looking to go and read online for any question you ask them. And if you have anything that requires more time like a return or something, it will take you forever to get out of there.

If it requires the Genius Bar, I’d rather just sell the device off and buy another before dealing with them. I’m not a huge fan of what the experience has become but at the same time my outlook on Apple has also changed significantly over the last 5 years to not buying much from them anymore. It selling a lot of our stuff off from Apple and changing platforms. Sad what Cookie has done to them.
 
In store experience has dropped significantly over the last few years. Listening to sales staff is embarrassing and almost Dixons/Currys/PC World level of cringe.

I remember when it was fun and exciting to visit an Apple Store.
Yes, many don’t have much technical knowledge.

I’m not sure what the training is, but for sales staff it must be extremely basic.

It’s certainly a funny experience to be there and realize you have a deeper knowledge of their products than most of the staff themselves.
 
Was a Mac Genius 2007-2014. Those were awesome times. Group photo of Genius training in Cupertino 2008... a practice lost to time. They train new technicians on PDFs, not the same caliber of expertise whatsoever. You'd do better watching a YouTube video.
 

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Like others, I am glad the Apple stores are there--to have access to products that otherwise would only be available online. Like others have said, though, the quality of the staff at the Apple Store has fallen precipitously over the past few years. It is very noticeable. There doesn't seem to be much difference between an Apple Store employee and the "Apple Guy" at Best Buy in terms of product knowledge.

A few weeks ago, I was in the Apple Store at Ridgedale Mall in Minnesota, wanting to compare the M4 MacBook Air to the M4 MacBook Pro. It seemed strange but the guy at the Apple Store was really trying to get me in the direction of the Pro, and to get the M4 Max at that (even though I'd told him the main reasons I was thinking I wanted the MPB was the monitor and better mic and speakers, not the processor, for what I do). That part was fine, but he was seemingly making stuff up in terms of how much better the M4 Max was over the M4 and M4 Pro (fortunately, I'd already done my research and knew I did not need the M4 Max, regardless of what I wanted to buy).
 
The best thing about Apple stores is being able to walk in if you ever have an issue and walking back out the issue fixed. No other retail store offers such a fast and high quality servicing for electronic devices.

I just with their stores were a bit more inviting. They have such a sterile feel at times.
I thought this about Apple Stores until I had a software update brick a new AppleTV 4K. These aren’t able to be restored by the user, so I made an appointment with the Genius Bar to restore the device. They said they aren’t able to restore them in store either, and best they can do is sell a new unit to me (the device was just at a year old).

I ended up calling support about it and the lady was awesome, express shipping me a new unit and me sending the old unit back. I’ll probably go that route instead of a store ever again.
 
I love that the story mentions the fate of the Gateway stores right before Apple’s launch. Since Apple, it’s been fun to watch others try to replicate their success… unsuccessfully. Dell did a few stores for a while. I think Microsoft’s were the closest to gain *some* traction, but they never became “the spot to hang out” like Apple Stores became. (Though I do remember seeing someone celebrating a birthday party at a Microsoft Store once. That was… weird.)
 
I love that the story mentions the fate of the Gateway stores right before Apple’s launch. Since Apple, it’s been fun to watch others try to replicate their success… unsuccessfully. Dell did a few stores for a while. I think Microsoft’s were the closest to gain *some* traction, but they never became “the spot to hang out” like Apple Stores became. (Though I do remember seeing someone celebrating a birthday party at a Microsoft Store once. That was… weird.)
MS store was probably a great place for a party bc they were always empty.

I only visited one once — embarrassing to ask where the Apple Store was, but it was the only storefront where I could see people to ask.

I do believe kids used to go there to play xbox.
 
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Was a Mac Genius 2007-2014. Those were awesome times. Group photo of Genius training in Cupertino 2008... a practice lost to time. They train new technicians on PDFs, not the same caliber of expertise whatsoever. You'd do better watching a YouTube video.
This. I too went away for genius training. The new techs who were trained via pdf and videos were constantly breaking devices, had zero technical troubleshooting skills, and for the repairs they did complete, the customer would usually return relatively quickly with an issue relating to the repair.

The stores are too successful. There are too many people going there for support. Before I left they tried to make stores a destination for hardware repairs only. However AppleCare, third party stores, and the sales specialists who were assigned on point would just book the most insane appointments ever and set the wildest expectations.
 
I ended up calling support about it and the lady was awesome, express shipping me a new unit and me sending the old unit back. I’ll probably go that route instead of a store ever again.

This is the route I go down now...
Support chat and then shipping the device out/back.
 
Today, Apple operates 534 stores across 27 countries,

Worth pointing out Apple had ~200 stores before the launch of iPhone. And with 1.2B new iPhone user and some 400M iPad and Mac user they now have...... 534 Stores.
 
Back in 2005 I was a diehard Windows PC fan and had built my own machine. I knew nothing about Apple or their products. Walking through a local mall I stumbled across a new store, an Apple Store. Curiously I took a stroll through it and saw some amazing things like little kids sitting around a table tapping away on keyboards and having fun on Mac’s. Beautiful hardware presented on fine displays. Excited shoppers chatting with each other about which Apple product they are going to buy. For a new store there was allot of excitement already happening, it was impressive. When I got home I spent the day researching this ‘Apple thing’ and decided there was something big going on in the computer world way beyond Microsoft and PC’s and I wanted in on it. The stock was cheap, only $12/share so having never bought stock before I purchased 100 shares. After my wife got tired of me talking about Mac’s she bought me a MacBook Pro that Christmas and I’ve never looked back. That store, that day, changed everything for me, thanks Apple.
 
The best thing about Apple stores is being able to walk in if you ever have an issue and walking back out the issue fixed. No other retail store offers such a fast and high quality servicing for electronic devices.

I just with their stores were a bit more inviting. They have such a sterile feel at times.
It used to feel much more welcoming before 2018.
 
It's too bad that it's still a 1.5hr drive (or two trains) to my nearest store in Liverpool or Manchester, but if I lived in London it seems there's a store every 500 yards. Over 1,200,000 people live here in Lancashire but there aren't any Apple stores in the county at all, not even in the county's administrative city, Preston. Though as a consequence the whole county is teeming with third-party vendors who will replace the original dying battery in your iPhone with something absolutely unofficial and probably unsafe for £30. It's as though we're dealing with a foreign company which doesn't realise just how difficult and time-consuming even a 65-70 mile journey is on this little over-populated island. Oh wait...
 
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