The Mail App is pre-configured on the Home Screen (the most valuable real estate on your iPhone), yet the word mail isn’t even mentioned in Apple’s 10-k. This is clearly an important app, not only to Apple, but also to Apple’s customers. iPhone users frequently drop the Mail app into their dock (the bottom tray on your screen that never goes away). Try googling images of “iPhone home screen”. You’ll see as many photos with the Mail app moved to the dock as you do with the pre-configuration.
So what’s up with Apple’s “nothing to see here” approach? It turns out mail isn’t as boring as you might think! In eight slides, I unveil the mystery, breaking down the logic and the numbers behind Apple mail.
Mail is the stealth app that holds its own alongside Safari and Music when it comes to providing value and utility to users.
Bear in mind that Apple is a product company. All of its cool software and services are designed to keep you buying more iPhones, iPads, and Macs (I dive into this in detail here). In this respect, Mail is no different. However, it is unique in it’s somewhat parasitic nature. More on that shortly! For now, it suffices to say that Apple Mail provides cheap reach and utility - it’s an email client that serves as a wrapper around other email clients/services and captures passive market share of opens.
Privacy is great marketing these days and Apple is uniquely positioned among the MAANG (Meta, Amazon, Apple, Netflix, Google) companies as it’s the only one whose business model isn’t powered by consumer data. The Mail app is not only a great utility, but it is a prominent value point in Apple’s privacy messaging.
I think most readers might be surprised to learn that Apple is the dominant email client. I’ll elaborate more on why in a bit. But since the release of Mail Privacy Protection, Apple has gained 6 percentage points market share of opens. This is proof that Apple is tapping into a top concern of users.
So I promised I’d circle back to a couple of points: