Genius Bar

Last updated
Apple Genius Bar
FormationMay 19, 2001;23 years ago (2001-05-19)
Parent organization
Apple
Website apple.com/retail/geniusbar

The Genius Bar is a technical support service provided by Apple Inc. inside Apple Stores to support the use of its products and services. The locations provide concierge-style, face-to-face support for customers from "Geniuses" who are specially trained and certified by Apple, with multiple levels of certification depending on the products serviced. For problems that require repairs to hardware, most of the work can be completed on-site[ citation needed ], while customers wait.

Contents

The Genius Bar at Apple Stores offers same-day service for both screen and lithium-ion battery replacements. If the in-house technician needs to send the affected device to an Apple Repair Center, most repaired or replaced iPhones will be returned or ready for pickup in approximately three business days.

Ron Johnson, the former senior vice president for retail, often referred to the Genius Bar as the "heart and soul" of the Apple Store. [1]

Store layout

Layouts of a Genius Bar previously consisted of at least two 15" or 17" current PowerBook or MacBook Pro, often mounted on "floating" stands. Employees now use iPads with similar software to check in machines for repairs. There may be other notebooks for iPod/iPhone troubleshooting, often referred to as "floaters". LCD screens behind the Bar play looped videos which offer tips to customers waiting for help. Stools can be found in front of the Bar for people to sit and chat with each other or with employees.

The "Red Telephone" sometimes seen behind the Genius Bar was a direct line to Apple product specialists, allowing for problems and questions too complicated for the in-store employees to answer. [2] As of August 2009, this phone is no longer installed in newer Apple Retail Stores and removed in others. [3]

Staff

Location in London Apple Genius Bar Regentstreet London.jpg
Location in London

The employees can also be viewed as the local representatives of AppleCare+. They offer personal support when customers have problems or questions relating to their Apple products. Most services carried out at the Genius Bar are free. Non-warranty service (which is paid for by the customer when repairs are complete) is also routinely performed. In some countries, Apple has service depots where portable repairs (for issues such as accidental damage) can be completed for a flat rate. Most portable computer repairs and all desktop repairs are performed in-store and completed overnight or within a few days.

In September 2009, the Family Room Specialists were folded into the mix to handle iPod and iPhone troubleshooting. After its release in 2010, iPad appointments also fell under the Family Room Specialists. Apple now maintains two Genius Bar queues: Mac and Mobile Device. [4]

Larger support teams are headed up by the "Lead Genius", who handles customer service issues at the Genius Bar. The Lead Genius is assisted by "Genius Admins", who manage the administrative paperwork, organizing the Geniuses' work and liaising with customers about their repairs.

Genius Training Student Workbook

The Genius Training Student Workbook is Apple's employee training manual for Apple Store tech-support employees, called Geniuses. [5] The manual features various marketing techniques revolving around the end goal of selling merchandise. One of the basic tenets taught to the employees in training is that “Everyone in the Apple Store is in the business of selling”. [6]

The basic selling strategy is summed up with a mnemonic device: Approach, Probe, Present, Listen, End (APPLE). When customers have concerns, the prescribed response in the manual is the "Three Fs:" Feel, Felt, and Found technique. [7] Every Genius must attend a two-week recruit training that mandates programs as diverse as “Using Diagnostic Services” and “The Power of Empathy.” [6] Geniuses also have a list of words that the manual clearly stipulates as banned; words such as "bomb", "crash" and "hang" must be substituted by "does not respond" or "unexpectedly quits". [8] The manual also teaches employees to read emotional cues such as drumming on a table or placing a palm on the back of the neck that might mean a customer is bored or frustrated, respectively. [9] Employees who are not in the Genius role don't receive this manual or go through this training,

The manual was a well-kept secret, until a copy leaked in August 2012 and ended in the hands of Gizmodo's senior staff writer Sam Biddle, who commented: "It’s a penetrating look inside Apple: psychological mastery, banned words, roleplaying—you’ve never seen anything like it." [10] A Christian Science Monitor article connected the manual's contents to the idea of the "reality distortion field", a term for Apple's effectiveness at charming customers. [11]

Spinoffs/offshoots

Currently, Apple offers the Genius Bar for technical support, and has Creatives – software trainers – available at all times to answer less technical questions.

Over the years, Apple has experimented with ways of offering service and support to complement the Genius Bar. Some examples, all now defunct, include:

Pro Labs and Open Lab were introduced with the opening of the Apple Store on West 14th Street in New York City, New York while Pro Labs is also offered at the Sydney, Australia Apple Store and the Pudong, China Apple Store. Open Lab to date is only offered at the West 14th Street location. [14] [15]

Apple has also branded features in their iTunes application "Genius" that make musical suggestions based on the user's observed taste.

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References

  1. IFO Apple Store (2004-03-01). "Analysts' Conference". Archived from the original on 2006-10-16. Retrieved 2006-10-13.
  2. "Big Crowds Cheer Apple Store Debut in California" (PDF). Mac World. Retrieved 3 March 2015. The Glendale Store's Genius Bar has a red phone with a direct line to Apple tech support. One customer on Saturday posed a question about whether software that Collier couldn't answer; one call on the red phone later, and the problem was solved within 10 minutes[ permanent dead link ]
  3. Ryan, Christopher (12 August 2009). "Five Apple Retail Flopps". Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 3 March 2015. In reality, many stores never used the red phone (after all, the idea was the Geniuses are supposed to be geniuses, right?) and it was simply relegated to a more iconic status as it sat on the counter. Eventually, the phones were removed.
  4. "Apple Creates New Job Position".
  5. Biddle, Sam (28 August 2012). "How To Be a Genius: This Is Apple's Secret Employee Training Manual". Gizmodo.com. Retrieved 31 August 2012.
  6. 1 2 Lee, Anita (30 August 2012). "Apple's Secret Employee Training Manual Revealed". Mashable.com. Retrieved 31 August 2012.
  7. Lee, Adriana. "Apple Genius Training Manual Leaked, Reveals Manipulation Tactics". TechnoBuffalo.com. Archived from the original on 2 September 2012. Retrieved 31 August 2012.
  8. "Unearthed: Apple's secret employee manual reveals sales tactics and prohibited words". Macworld Australia. Archived from the original on 10 September 2012. Retrieved 31 August 2012.
  9. Ugwu, Reggie. "Banned Words And Managed Emotions: Leaked Manual Spills Apple Genius Secrets". Complex.com. Retrieved 31 August 2012.
  10. Gallo, Carmine. "Apple's Secret Employee Training Manual Reinvents Customer Service in Seven Ways". Forbes. Retrieved 31 August 2012.
  11. Ward-Bailey, Jeff. "How Apple Geniuses get inside our heads". The Christian Science Monitor. Retrieved 30 November 2013.
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