The Apple Core

Jason D. O'Grady & David Morgenstern

Can Macworld Expo survive without Apple?

By | December 17, 2008, 10:09am PST

Summary: Yesterday’s earth-shattering announcement that Apple will abruptly stop exhibiting at Macworld Expo after January’s event sent shockwaves through the Mac community. After 25 years of anchoring the exhibit-hall with its massive booth and kicking off the event with a keynote address that people would literally wait in line for 24 hours to see, Apple is [...]

Can Macworld Expo survive without Apple?Yesterday’s earth-shattering announcement that Apple will abruptly stop exhibiting at Macworld Expo after January’s event sent shockwaves through the Mac community. After 25 years of anchoring the exhibit-hall with its massive booth and kicking off the event with a keynote address that people would literally wait in line for 24 hours to see, Apple is dumping the Expo like a MacBook with a bad RAM slot.

The decision, while shocking, isn’t entirely unexpected. Apple noted in their press release that the company has been steadily scaling back on trade shows in recent years, including NAB, Macworld New York, Macworld Tokyo and Apple Expo in Paris. It’s easy to see the business decision to bail on Macworld Expo, which Rob Griffiths deftly explains:

As a business person, I think I completely understand Apple’s decision—not being tied to a huge annual event, occurring just after the Christmas buying season, is a good thing. Not spending a small fortune on everything involved in participating in a huge trade show is a good thing. Having more flexibility in releasing products whenever you want to is a good thing. Not having to come up with One More Thing every year is a good thing. So really, I get it; it makes perfect business sense.

I’m left to wonder if the SuperBowl of Macdom can survive without its star attraction.

Paul Kent, vice president and general manager of IDG World Expo, put the best possible spin on the gut wrenching news, committing to putting on another show at the Moscone Center in 2010. Adding “We look forward to many successful years of Macworld to come.” But that’s what he’s supposed to say.

Apple’s pull-out from Macworld Expo has to be hitting its exhibitors even harder. The high price of exhibiting at trade shows is getting harder and harder to justify in our tough economic times, but like Christmas itself, many companies, like parents “find a way” to make it happen year after year. If Expo stalwarts like Adobe, Belkin and Seagate pulled out of the 2009 Macworld Expo before Apple made their announcement, what will the other exhibitors do with their hard earned trade show dollars next year? It’s tough to say, but it certainly doesn’t bode well for the future of the event.

Will Macworld Expo live on?

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Topics

Jason O'Grady is a journalist and author specializing in mobile technology. He has published six books on Apple and mobile gadgets and his PowerPage blog has been publishing for over 15 years.

Disclosure

Jason D. O'Grady

Jason D. O'Grady is the creator and editor of O'Grady's PowerPage, which has been publishing mobile technology news since 1995. He maintains an advertising relationship with the following legacy advertisers on the PowerPage:

  • Amazon Associates
  • Google Adsense
  • Tekserve
  • Advertising on the PowerPage is brokered by a third-party agency (BackBeat Media) and he recuses himself from these negotiations.

Biography

Jason D. O'Grady

Jason D. O'Grady developed an affinity for Apple computers after using the original Lisa, and this affinity turned into a bona-fide obsession when he got the original 128 KB Macintosh in 1984.

He started writing one of the first Web sites about Apple (O'Grady's PowerPage) in 1995 and is considered to be one of the fathers of blogging. He has been a frequent speaker at the Macworld Expo conference and a member of the conference faculty. He also co-founded the first dedicated PowerBook User Group (PPUG) in the United States.

After winning a major legal battle with Apple in 2006, he set the precedent that independent journalists are entitled to the same protections under the First Amendment as members of the mainstream media.

O'Grady is the author of The Nexus One Pocket Guide, The Droid Pocket Guide, The Google Phone Pocket Guide, and The Garmin nuvi Pocket Guide (Peachpit Press), the author of Corporations That Changed the World: Apple Inc. (Greenwood Press), and a contributor to The Mac Bible (Peachpit Press). In addition, he has contributed to numerous Mac publications over the years, including MacWEEK, Macworld, and MacPower (Japan).

When he's not writing about Apple for ZDNet at The Apple Core, he enjoys spending time with his family in New Jersey.

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RE: Can Macworld Expo survive without Apple?
jackson1984-24316069205748857739440257893812 11th Oct
That excellent internet site has quite a bit of practical suggestions. You will find nfl jersey right here all you require to understand.
0 Votes
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Why not just do an internet expo?
Been_Done_Before 17th Dec 2008
Everyone can get to it and doesnt cost much. Hell, you could keep it running year round! LOL

Maybe they finally realized that macs are not as popular as they think.
0 Votes
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RE: Can Macworld Expo survive without Apple?
blackjack861@... 17th Dec 2008
That's like asking can a cow, survive without giving milk. It will either give milk, or end up on the butcher's block.
0 Votes
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Apple has MacWorld every day
j.m.galvin 18th Dec 2008
It takes place in the Apple stores. They need a
trade show like a hole in the head.

When Apple has a new product to introduce,
they just send our a press invite to the
announcement and are swamped with coverage
from both the tech and main stream press.

There is simply no benefit for Apple from
MacWorld. Further, there's little "excitement"
any more about all the doodads and gadgets
you can connect to a computer. Is anybody
really "excited' by a new printer or whatever?
There is little benefit for the makers of such
things to exhibit as MacWorld.
0 Votes
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These shows are great to show off new products and it helps the local economy. However without these big players like Apple and Adobe, MacWorld will not have the power to draw people to MacWorld Expo even if IDG wanted to.
The credit crunch might be one thing to pull out, but it might also be a good sign that Apple finally got enough spin to be on 'everyone's' mind. What will happen to the WWDC though?
0 Votes
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Why would Macworld Expo want to survive without Apple? The Mag itself is just a brochure for Apple .. sometimes more iPhone and iPod than computer info.

A far cry from MaximumPC and I'm neither a gamer or Windows user, just like to know what is going on in the industry.

Apple still has a lot of growing up to do which is unlikely as long as the head is a brilliant juvenile.
0 Votes
+ -
RE: Can Macworld Expo survive without Apple?
jackson1984-24316069205748857739440257893812 11th Oct
That excellent internet site has quite a bit of practical suggestions. You will find nfl jersey right here all you require to understand.

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