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Apple iPad: The Tablet People Know

By MAE ANDERSON 04/ 8/12 02:04 PM ET AP

NEW YORK -- Apple is on the verge of doing what few others have: change the English language.

When you have a boo-boo, you reach for a Band-Aid not a bandage. When you need to blow your nose, you ask for Kleenex not tissue. If you decide to look up something online, you Google instead of search for it. And if you want to buy a tablet computer, there's a good chance there's only one name you'll remember.

"For the vast majority, the idea of a tablet is really captured by the idea of an iPad,'" says Josh Davis, a manager at Abt Electronics in Chicago. "They gave birth to the whole category and brought it to life."

Companies trip over themselves to make their brands household names. But only a few brands become so engrained in the lexicon that they're synonymous with the products themselves. This so-called "genericization" can be both good and bad for companies like Apple, which must balance their desire for brand recognition with their disdain for brand deterioration.

It's one of the biggest contradictions in business. Companies spend millions to create a brand. Then, they spend millions more on marketing that can have the unintended consequence of making those names so popular that they become shorthand for similar products. It's like if people start calling station wagons Bentleys. It can diminish a brand's reputation.

"There's tension between legal departments concerned about `genericide' and marketing departments concerned about sales," says Michael Atkins, a Seattle trademark attorney. "Marketing people want the brand name as widespread as possible and trademark lawyers worry ... the brand will lose all trademark significance."

It doesn't happen often. In fact, it's estimated that fewer than 5 percent of U.S. brand names become generic. Those that do typically are inventions or products that improve on what's already on the market. The brand names then become so popular that they eclipse rivals in sales, market share and in the minds' of consumers. And then they spread through the English language like the common cold in a small office.

"There's nothing that can be done to prevent it once it starts happening," says Michael Weiss, professor of linguistics at Cornell University. "There's no controlling the growth of language."

FIGHTING BACK

A company's biggest fear is that their brand name becomes so commonly used to describe a product that a judge rules that it's too "generic" to be a trademark. That means that any product – even inferior ones – can legally use the name. A brand usually is declared legally generic after a company sues another firm for using its name and the case goes to a federal court.

Drug maker Bayer lost trademarks for the names "aspirin" and "heroin" this way in the 1920s. So did B.F. Goodrich, which sued to protect its trademark of "zipper" in the 1920s after the name joined the world of common nouns. Similar cases deemed "escalator" generic in 1950, "thermos" generic in 1963 and "yo-yo" generic in 1965.

It's difficult to quantify how much revenue a company loses when its brand is deemed generic. But companies worry that it breeds confusion among consumers.

To prevent their names from becoming generic, some companies use marketing to reinforce their trademarks. For instance, after its Band-Aid brand name started becoming commonly used to refer to adhesive bandages, Johnson & Johnsons changed its jingle in ads from "I'm Stuck on Band-Aid" to "I'm Stuck on Band-Aid brand."

Kleenex uses "Kleenex brand" instead of just "Kleenex" on its packaging and in marketing and places ads to remind people Kleenex is trademarked. And the company contacts some people who use Kleenex generically to refer to tissue in order to correct them.

"We've worked very hard to keep `Kleenex' from going the route of `escalator' and `aspirin,'" says Vicki Margolis, vice president and chief counsel, intellectual property and global marketing for Kimberly-Clark, which owns Kleenex. "If we lose the trademark, people can use it with sandpaper and call that a Kleenex."

Xerox is taking a similar route. The company, which introduced the first automatic copier in the U.S. in 1959, has been on a public crusade for decades to keep its brand from becoming generic. The machine's success has led people to start using "Xerox" to refer to any copying machine, copies made from one and the act of copying.

"In the mid- to late-1970s, we ran dangerously close to Xerox becoming `genericized,'" says Barbara Basney, vice president of global advertising. "That prompted a lot of proactive action to protect our trademark."

Xerox has spent millions taking out ads aimed at educating so-called "influencers" like lawyers, journalists and entertainers about its brand name. A 2003 ad said: "When you use `Xerox' the way you use `aspirin,' we get a headache." More recently, a 2007 ad read: "If you use "Xerox" the way you use "zipper," our trademark could be left wide open."

While people still use "Xerox" generically – the Merriam-Webster dictionary lists the word as both a lower-case verb with the definition "to copy on a xerographic copier" and a trademarked noun – the brand says its campaign has been a success.

Xerox is still popular: It's ranked the 57th most valuable global brand, worth $6.4 billion, according to brand consultancy Interbrand. And perhaps most importantly, Xerox hasn't lost its trademark.

TAKING IT IN STRIDE

Sometimes companies embrace when their brands become common nouns.

Perhaps the best example of this is Google, a company created in 1998 when Alta Vista and Yahoo.com were the top online search engines. Google, which created a formula that returned more accurate results than its competitors, became so popular that people began saying "Google" to refer to a Web search, in general. Experts say Google has benefited from its name becoming a part of the lexicon.

"You don't say `Why don't I Google it' and go to Yahoo or Bing," says Jessica Litman, professor of copyright law at the University of Michigan Law School, referring to other search engines.

Apple also has gotten a boost from its brand names becoming synonymous with products. The iPod, which was the first digital music player when it came out in 2001, is still the name people use for "digital music player" or "MP3 player." And it appears Apple's iPad is headed down the same path.

For consumers like Mary Schmidt, 58, the "iPad" is generic for "tablet." Schmidt, a Baltimore marketing executive, owns an iPad and doesn't know the names of any other tablets.

"When I think of tablets, I think of an iPad," she says. "I think it's going to be the generic name. They were first."

It remains to be seen if the iPad will maintain its name domination in the tablet market. Apple declined to comment for this article.

For now, Apple Inc. has a majority of the tablet category, which includes Amazon's Kindle Fire and Samsung Electronics Co.'s Galaxy Tablet. The iPad accounted for about 73 percent of the estimated 63.6 million tablets sold globally last year, according to research firm Gartner.

Apple's market share is likely to decline as more rivals roll out tablets. But experts say that won't necessarily diminish iPad's name recognition.

"Apple is actually pretty good at this," says Litman, the law school professor. "It's able to skate pretty close to the generics line while making it very clear the name is a trademark of the Apple version of this general category."

When the iPad debuted in 2010, some people offered up "Apple Tablet" or the "iTab" as better names. Others even suggested that the name sounded more like a feminine hygiene product than a tablet: "Get ready for Maxi pad jokes and lots of `em!" wrote tech site Gizmo at the time.

Two years later, those complaints are all but forgotten.

"At the end of the day, the product was so successful that even if it wasn't the `quote unquote' best name, it made the name synonymous with the category," says Allen Adamson, managing director at branding firm Landor.

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NEW YORK -- Apple is on the verge of doing what few others have: change the English language. When you have a boo-boo, you reach for a Band-Aid not a bandage. When you need to blow your nose, you ask...
NEW YORK -- Apple is on the verge of doing what few others have: change the English language. When you have a boo-boo, you reach for a Band-Aid not a bandage. When you need to blow your nose, you ask...
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This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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riptaker90
Ya know?
05:07 AM on 04/10/2012
No longer applies. Too much info out there for the consumer. Those that would are living in a bubble. This isn't the 1950s
02:27 AM on 04/09/2012
Whats in a name?
02:20 AM on 04/09/2012
I just ordered my first tablet and first ever apple product! I decided to go with the wifi only ipad 2. Go me!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tazirai
Society is not your friend.
01:02 AM on 04/09/2012
Apple is the new Sony. I remember growing up comparing EVERYTHING to Sony this, Aiwa that, etc. Sony is almost out of the game now. For one reason.. They went for NAME over Innovation.
Apple is starting to go that route. I'm no apple hater, I do own stock in them, But im also no Apple fanboy. If you can objectively look at the History of ANYTHING, things start small, rise, then fall. It occurs EVERY SINGLE TIME!.

So enjoy Apple for now, but realize something better WILL come along.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BurningStarz
Matrix Is A System Neo.
01:34 AM on 04/09/2012
true
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Cdangers
wish people would pick up a book once in a while.
12:59 AM on 04/09/2012
Did you get paid off to write this ad piece? Nobody refers to an MP3 player as an ipod unless it's actually an ipod. No one is going to start calling everything ipads. They're called tablets. Why didn't you go the extra mile and state that people are going to call all smart phones, iphones? Ridiculous drivel.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
NotBob
Yes, I'm really not Bob.
12:26 AM on 04/09/2012
"Apple also has gotten a boost from its brand names becoming synonymous with products. The iPod, which was the first digital music player when it came out in 2001, is still the name people use for "digital music player" or "MP3 player."

Not even close.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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BobbyZRay
Gentlemen prefer chaos
01:45 AM on 04/09/2012
Audio Highway Listen Up in 1996
25 units were made.
But commercial mass production of DAP
was not started by Apple.

First:SaeHan/Eiger MPMan in 1997
Second:Diamond Rio in 1998
Third:HanGo Personal Jukebox in 1998
Fourth:Creative NOMAD Jukebox 1999
Fifth:Cowon iAUDIO CW100 in 2000
Sixth:Archos Jukebox in 2000
12:24 AM on 04/09/2012
Let's try to get a fact inside the apple bubble:
In the "article" we learn that: the ipod was the first digital music player !!!!!?????
wow, that one is a nugget of apple bubble talk....it came out at least 4-5 years after the first mp3 players
all it had was a brand, a pricetag and a totaly closed format designed to get you to subscribe to itunes...
the ipad came 10 years after the first tablets
only thing apple invents anymore IS brandnames and trademarks
they do this BRILIANTLY
but they haven"t invented a technology since the firewire standart
12:24 AM on 04/09/2012
Although the iPod is the most popular MP3 player, it was hardly the first. The Creative Nomad, for example, predated the iPod by a few years. What the iPod offered was quality, storage, and a huge improvement in transfer speeds. The nomad was built like so many other portable consumer electronics of the 80's and 90's. There would be quality in the intermal parts, but often there was a plastic control that would break and make the entire device unusable. Apple set a precedent that such points of failure were no longer acceptable.

The faster port was needed for the larger capacity. I recall it taking an hour to fill by Nomad, with only 64 MB of storage. The iPod at least 50-100X that storage, which required Firewire speeds. That is until the USB 2.0 standard was set. This gave other MP3 manufacturers a bit of leeway as the main advantage of the iPod was not available to PC users until 2004. This was due to Apple and MS, who only released the SP that supported USB 2.0 around that time.
12:14 AM on 04/09/2012
May be it's just me, but I have never come across anyone who would call a non-iPad tablet an iPad. Is there another white tablet? i don't think so.
12:12 AM on 04/09/2012
What is really needed is a iPad that does flah and adobe
Until then, the iPad is second rate
12:14 AM on 04/09/2012
try xoom
12:11 AM on 04/09/2012
America loves Apple and hates Microsoft. Even Foxconn story cannot change that...somehow since everyone is exploiting Chinese workers, it's okay if Apple does it too.
11:59 PM on 04/08/2012
Guilty. We just got an XYBoard, and it's a very nice tablet, but I admit that I've called it an iPad just so people know what I'm talking about -- I've found more people I speak to know what an "iPad" is than a "tablet."
11:48 PM on 04/08/2012
Come on, if you do hear people ignorantly call a non-iPad tablet an iPad they are being an idiot. There's no reason to call a non-iPad an iPad, it just leads to miscommunication and isn't simplifying anything. They are both two syllables and everybody who knows what an iPad is knows what a tablet is.

There are more reasons for the "genericization" of brands than the sole fact they are the most popular. Nobody calls all electric cars Priuses... or all fried chicken KFC...
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yogajan
Well behaved women rarely make history
11:37 PM on 04/08/2012
Lots of techies with lots of opinions here. I am a non-techie female who has used Apple products since the early 1980's and have never been disappointed with them.

I love my iPad and iPhone and MacAir because I know I am getting a quality product that is amazing in its scope and options.

Lots of people like me around.
11:47 PM on 04/08/2012
I'm with you on this one, yogajan.
11:21 PM on 04/08/2012
It won't be that way for long. Windows 8 tablets running on ARM are right around the corner and will probably change the game.
11:46 PM on 04/08/2012
Man it gets old listening to what MS will do in the future.

Just do it for goodness sake. Then we can decide. You know, like Apple does!
12:00 AM on 04/09/2012
I guess you don't follow tech news, which is strange because you are commenting on a tech story.
11:47 PM on 04/08/2012
Yup. Keep waiting. Avoid Apple products in the meantime, please. Sheesh.