Case study · Failure database
Apperian
Failure
Technology & Software
Primary gap · Problem Clarity
Problem Clarity
Apperian built a mobile application management platform designed to let enterprises distribute apps to employees without requiring device management or code modifications. IT departments and security teams experienced the acute pain of controlling app access across bring-your-own-device (BYOD) environments, where traditional mobile device management (MDM) solutions felt invasive and required extensive developer integration. The problem was measurable—companies tracked unauthorized app installations, security breaches, and deployment friction. Competitors like MobileIron and AirWatch offered full MDM suites, while lighter alternatives like Citrix provided containerization approaches.
Apperian's fatal miscalculation was underestimating how deeply enterprises valued comprehensive device control over selective app management. As security threats evolved, customers increasingly demanded full device visibility rather than app-only solutions. The company missed warning signs that the market was consolidating around broader platforms—Apple and Google were simultaneously building native management capabilities into iOS and Android, eroding demand for third-party solutions. Apperian's narrow focus on app distribution without addressing device-level security ultimately proved insufficient for enterprise requirements.
Execution Feasibility
Apperian launched with an MVP focused on enterprise app distribution without requiring MDM integration—a deliberate choice that differentiated them from competitors. They shipped quickly to market in 2010, capitalizing on early BYOD momentum, and deliberately excluded complex device management features to keep their platform lightweight. This execution strategy initially attracted enterprise customers frustrated with rigid MDM solutions.
However, Apperian missed a critical warning sign: the market was rapidly consolidating around comprehensive mobile device management platforms. By excluding MDM capabilities, they positioned themselves as a point solution in an industry moving toward integrated suites. Enterprise buyers increasingly wanted unified management, not fragmented tools. Apperian's lean approach, once an advantage, became a liability as larger competitors like MobileIron and AirWatch bundled app management into broader platforms. The company was acquired by IBM in 2014 for an undisclosed amount, suggesting they never achieved the standalone market dominance their execution strategy promised. Their speed-to-market couldn't overcome the fundamental market shift toward consolidation.
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apperian
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