This is from an article I wrote for the Harvard Business Review:

Every day, multi-million dollar consumer electronics products suffer the consequences of poor, lazy, ineffective, uninspired, unprepared, overly-technical, follow-the-status-quo marketing. Were it not for the intense media and consumer interest in high technology, the industry would be in big trouble. The products at retail are generally good, but the marketing ranges from atrocious to bad.

The consumer electronics industry is succeeding in spite of its marketing.

I define the most successful consumer electronics as those which have the most evangelists — passionate, high-energy communicators — among mainstream consumers. Based on my observations and experience, the most successful products in the industry are various Apple devices (the iPad, the iPhone, and the Mac), the Amazon Kindle, and the Netflix service. These three companies create more mainstream evangelists as a percentage of their total users than other companies. Think of the way these companies are talked about by your friends and family — more than likely you know an evangelist of one or more of these firms.

So, the question becomes, what separates them from other players in their markets?
First, the products share elements that elevate them above the consumer electronics commodity bin: all of them make people feel good, exceed already high expectations, and improve people’s perceived quality of life.

Click here to read the rest of the article on the HBR.org site.