2023 has not been a good year for the MacBook. Falling sales, delayed launches, and a lack of innovative features in the pipeline contributed to the macOS laptop’s lacklustre performance. What does Apple need to do to address these problems and find success over the next twelve months?
First, Apple needs to look at what it expected of the 15-inch MacBook Air. Launched at its Worldwide Developer Conference, it was the first consumer MacBook with a display over 13 inches. Much was expected; with the larger form factor, surely it would unlock a wave of sales from consumers waiting for fifteen inches?
While the first burst of sales looked promising after the rush of “Back To School” purchases, demand tailed off, and Apple cut the order book. Its predictions of how the market would react had fallen short.
Then you have the continued impact of the coronavirus pandemic and the resulting rise of the Work From Home movement. How people worked changed, and with it, the demand for more flexible technology. The resulting sales of consumer electronics across individuals and enterprise customers increased revenues and sales across the board. Naturally, Apple’s MacBook Air and MacBook Pro lines benefitted from this, and it’s worth remembering that Apple began the transition to ARM-based silicon during 2020 and into 2021, giving impetus to those looking to upgrade to consider the MacBook.
With the excess demand met, the MacBook community are now all carrying relatively new laptops and the usual rhythm to refresh equipment has been dampened. The PC market has seen a fall of thirty percent year-on-year during 2023, but Apple fell even further, with MacBook sales down by up to 45 percent.
Finally, you have the excitement, or in the case of the MacBook, the lack of excitement. Apple had spent years ensuring that the move from Intel-based hardware to ARM-based hardware went smoothly. That move allowed the Mac range to offer serious performance, battery life, and efficiency jumps. It was an attractive calling card. The MacBook Pro laptops offered a new design, larger screens with smaller bezels, the return of vital I/O and expansion ports, and the MacBook Air models followed that lead.
These were all changes that excited and energised Apple’s community.
A look at today’s PC laptop market shows innovation and exciting products across the board; you have displays that run up to 4K; touchscreens which integrate cleanly into the operating system; machines tailored for AAA gaming, artistic and creative work, robust enterprise devices, or highly mobile laptops and tablets. The PC laptop market is wide, expansive and offers many solutions for a wide range of consumers.
What can Apple offer to challenge this market? The MacBook Air and MacBook Pro laptops are ‘everything’ laptops, which must accommodate every possible use case at their price point. Now that the move to Apple Silicon has been completed, how can Apple make its laptops exciting and desirable?
Apple is set to update the MacBook family to the next generation of Apple Silicon, the M3 platform. This was expected to begin this month. Yet, for all the signs and indications throughout the year, the launch has been delayed into the middle of 2024. yet every manufacturer will offer a faster, more powerful, and more efficient chipset year on year.
For Apple to cut through with the MacBook, it needs to understand the market better, reverse the falling sales, and make the macOS laptops exciting again.
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