Collections

The Apple iWatch: An industry upheaval?

CollectionsAug 10, 2016

The Apple iWatch: An industry upheaval?

The late Nicolas Hayek saved the day for the Swiss watch industry in the 1980s. Who will do the same to mitigate the impact of the iWatch today, columnist Jan Brassem asks.


Jan Brassem is a senior partner at MainBrace Global Partners, a global jewelry advisory and & firm. 
Unless you’ve been in Siberia for the past 24 months or so, you’ve surely read or heard about the highly anticipated launch of Apple Inc.’s iWatch.

Apple’s sagacious and highly destructive blockbuster lineup of their iPhone, iPod and iPad are extremely formidable products (stone-cold category killers, some say), and have transformed, in certain instances eviscerated, the U.S. music, digital, paper, publishing, photography and communication industries.

For example, based on convenience, size, speed and price, some consumers have started using the iPhone as their main camera instead of the traditional point-and-shoot models. The same goes for phone booths and desktop phones (replaced by the iPhone), CDs (iPod, iPhone), hard-cover books (iPad), magazines (iPad) and even folded-paper road maps (iPad). There are more, but you get the idea.

Thanks to the Apple product lineup, American culture also has been altered. Whatever happened to table manners (sullied by the iPhone and texting), alarm clocks (replaced by the iPhone), attention spans (diverted by the iPhone), conversations (blocked out by ear buds), driving safety (iPhone texting) and so on?

The looming iWatch launch
Although Apple is the most valuable company in the world, reporting a $10.7 billion profit in the second quarter of fiscal 2014, it is also the most competitive and pathologically secretive.

When Apple launches a product--generally industry-altering products (see above)--it designs them so they will sell in large quantities and make immense profits. If your company’s product(s) even remotely compete with any Apple creation, beware.

At least 17 global tech firms have launched their smartwatches, with others on the drawing board or recent entrants in a very crowded field indeed.

There has been time enough for Apple, as part of their marketing strategy, to view the landscape and observe their competitors’ expensive mistakes. Apple, for example, considers consumer fashion, in contrast to their rivals’ dithering design approach, a critical component of product success. Sir Jonathan Ives, reputed to be the world’s foremost industrial designer, leads Apple’s 100 professional (watch) design team.

The wearable technology market stampede
With the launch of so many high-tech consumer products lately, it’s no surprise that these companies have discovered a new consumer market opportunity, namely the wearable technology segment. As The New York Times’ Eric Pfanner wrote recently, “… turn(ing) the human body into a mobile computing

and communication platform” seems to be a natural evolution.

Simply put, the smartwatch communicates with a cell phone via Bluetooth technology. The blockbuster concept was discovered in 2012 and, before the end of that year, global smartwatch sales totaled $70 million. In 2014, it should exceed $2.5 billion.

With all the iPads, iPods, iPhones, smartphones, tablets and who knows what else, it is no surprise that tech firms, including Apple, would clamber like a tech “jail break” into watches, which are considered the lowest hanging fruit of the wearable technology segment. Easy pickings, indeed.

The tumultuous history of watches
“During WW I, soldiers had to be alert to precise timing,” writes David Boettcher in Smithsonian Magazine. “Suddenly, wristwatches seemed manly. It was the iPhone of its day, (considered a) leading-edge technology.”

Like other innovative mechanical developments of those days, wristwatches spread virally. After the war, millions of soldiers developed a taste for the wristwatch-wearing habit. An industry was born and, over the years, developed with gorgeous designs and fine mechanical movements.

There were challenges, however.

In the early 1980s, for example, because of higher labor rates, the Swiss mechanical watch industry had lost over 60,000 jobs to the less expensive quartz watch movements made in Japan, an unanticipated and potentially dangerous mechanical competitor.

Switzerland, at that time, was the watch capital of the world. Nevertheless, the Swiss government was prepared to hand over a major portion of Swiss pride and history to the Japanese. In certain respects, the companies, the industry, and even Switzerland itself, were fiscal train wrecks. No one was smiling.

Nicolas Hayek, a successful Swiss management consultant, a leader and, some say, a business genius, was asked by the two major Swiss banks to prepare a plan for the sale of two of the country’s struggling watchmaking giants to Japan.

Hayek immediately designed a Swiss rescue plan. In summary, he created and executed strategies that resulted in one of the most spectacular industrial comebacks in the world. To quote William Taylor, a former associate editor of Harvard Business Review, “The dimensions of the turnaround are staggering.”

To be fair, one of the results of the Hayek’s strategy, of course, was the development of the legendary, and stunning, Swatch watch. In its first full year of global distribution, 1983, Swatch sales totaled 1.1 million units and ballooned to 12 million units only three years later. Switzerland was saved.

What impact will the iWatch have on the watch industry?
With Apple’s competitive reputation, their “take-no-prisoners” business strategy will be sure to affect watch brands with a retail price of $1,000 or less, claims Ming-Chi Kuo of KGI Securities.

Some financial and market analysts (Goldman Sachs and The Wall Street Journal, for example) speculate that the iWatch will be manufactured in Taiwan and launched in the second half of 2014. They estimate global iWatch sales of 10 to 15 million units in 2014. That number should increases to 50 to 75 million in 2015.

That computes to $100 million in estimated 2014 sales and will come at the expense of existing smartwatch players.

Even worse, some mechanical watch manufacturers with weak balance sheets, an unclear branding strategy or poor distribution may have to close their doors, consolidate or merge. In other words: chaos.

One thing is clear, there is no Nicolas Hayek around to save the day and make a difference on the looming watch industry turmoil. The industry could sure use him.

Michelle Graffis the editor-in-chief at National Jeweler, directing the publication’s coverage both online and in print.

The Latest

trend retail.jpg
PodcastsJan 12, 2026
The latest poscast

test

Screenshot from 2026-01-12 06-22-03.png
PodcastsJan 12, 2026
New podcast without sponsor

test

20210205_Alexia_Connellan_Gatsby_earrings.jpg
TrendsJan 12, 2026
New test Article

test article

trend ss21@2x.jpg
Brought to you by
new sponsored article

test

2019_De_Beers_rough_NEW_1.jpg
PodcastsJan 12, 2026
New sponsored podcast

test

Weekly QuizOct 03, 2024
This Week’s Quiz
Test your jewelry news knowledge by answering these questions.
Take the Quiz
MNQ FINAL - NJ web - 1872 x 1052 px.png
PodcastsJan 12, 2026
Introducing My Next Question, the Podcast

A monthly podcast series for jewelry professionals

Screenshot from 2025-12-31 12-03-28.png
PodcastsDec 31, 2025
Test new podcast post

Test new podcast post

Jewelers Mutual Group Cybersecurity
Brought to you by
Navigating Cybersecurity: Essential Guidance for Jewelers

From protecting customer data to safeguarding inventory records, it's crucial to learn how to tackle cybersecurity challenges.

MNQ - studio - screen -1920 x 1080.png
PodcastsDec 29, 2025
Molly Test Podcast Episode

This is the abstract for Molly Test Podcast Episode

image 169 (4 col).png
PodcastsDec 10, 2025
Podcast With Video

Podcast Without Video or Audio or Image

image 169 (4 col).jpg
Recorded WebinarsDec 04, 2025
New Recorded Webinar for tests

New Recorded Webinar for tests

User-Avatar-PNG-Picture.png
PodcastsDec 03, 2025
Test Article Title

test Abstract

20210204_Couture_show_shot.jpg
PodcastsDec 02, 2025
New podcast

test desc

Screenshot from 2025-12-05 13-54-41.png
PodcastsNov 27, 2025
Test Podcast With Video

Test Podcast With Video. New interview with Ada Lovelace.

Image for tests
PodcastsNov 25, 2025
Test New Podcast Post

Abstract for tests. New Podcast interview with John Lennon, Jimi Hendrix and Jim Morison.

National Jeweler columnist Peter Smith
ColumnistsOct 09, 2024
Peter Smith: 7 Things to Know When Selling Luxury

Ahead of the holiday season, Smith delves into the often subconscious reasons people buy luxury products for themselves or their loved ones.

Edgar Mitchell wearing Rolex watch on Apollo 14
AuctionsOct 09, 2024
Rolex Worn on Apollo 14 Mission Up for Sale

The GMT-Master “Pepsi” belonging to astronaut Edgar Mitchell is a standout in RR Auction’s online “Space Auction,” going on now.

Simon meet me at the mall campaign
MajorsOct 09, 2024
New Simon Campaign Invites Gen Z to ‘Meet Me At The Mall’

The ads celebrate the mall culture of the ‘80s and ‘90s.

Platinum Guild International training
MajorsOct 09, 2024
PGI Launches New Virtual Sales Training

Retail sales associates can access the video series on mobile to refresh their selling skills.

Gathering at Bharat Diamond Bourse for COVID vaccinations
Policies & IssuesOct 09, 2024
GJNRF: Reaching Out, Rebuilding Futures

For 25 years, India’s Gem & Jewellery National Relief Foundation has provided aid in the wake of war, natural disasters, and global crises.

Sotheby’s A Tsar’s Treasure: Ferdinand of Bulgaria
AuctionsOct 08, 2024
Sotheby’s Selling Jewelry That Belonged to a Bulgarian Tsar

The November auction will feature a collection of jewels owned by Ferdinand I, the first king of modern Bulgaria, and his family.

Rough diamonds mined at the Diavik Diamond Mine
SourcingOct 08, 2024
Rio Tinto Begins New Phase of Production That Will Extend Diavik’s Life

Commercial production has begun underground at the Canadian diamond mine’s A21 pipe.

Stock image of hand holding phone by keyboard
SurveysOct 08, 2024
What to Know About Online Shopping This Holiday Season

Deloitte and Adobe Analytics shared their insights on the season, from the retail sales forecast to the role of generative AI.

Diamond on polishing wheel Venus Jewel India
SourcingOct 08, 2024
Is Current Diamond Industry Turbulence Shaping a ‘New Normal’?

Industry players have found ways to cope with market conditions while working to reshape themselves in the face of emerging realities.

Rio Tinto 2024 Beyond RareTM Tender Art Series
SourcingOct 07, 2024
Rio Tinto to Offer 76 Diamonds in 2024 Beyond Rare Tender

The sales event, in its second year, features a selection of rare diamonds from the miner’s Argyle and Diavik diamond mines.

Hill & Co. logo
SurveysOct 07, 2024
Hill & Co.’s New ‘Business of Jewelry Report’ Is Out

The first in what is slated to be a series of in-depth reports from the consulting company, it focuses on shortening supply chains.

Benjamin Clymer and the Porsche Design x Hodinkee limited-edition watch
WatchesOct 04, 2024
Watches of Switzerland Clocks Another Acquisition—Hodinkee

The company said Benjamin Clymer will return to his role as head of the watch news website, which will maintain editorial independence.

×

This site uses cookies to give you the best online experience. By continuing to use & browse this site, we assume you agree to our Privacy Policy