Skip to main content

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

Apple finally makes a play for Mac-based small businesses

Apple is now targeting small businesses with a new subscription following the company’s success with its Apple One service for individuals and families. Like Apple One, the new Apple Business Essentials subscription includes iCloud storage, but the business-oriented offering swaps out consumer services — like Apple TV+, Apple Fitness+, and Apple News+ — for device management and onboarding services. as well as access to Apple Support.

Apple’s Business Essentials plan covers all Apple hardware, including the iPhone, iPad, and Mac, and it includes setup, onboarding, backup, security, repairs, and updates. Apple is positioning its Business Essentials service as an IT service for small and midsize businesses (SMBs).

Mac Business Essentials on a MacBook Pro.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

The Cupertino, California, maker of the Mac and iPhone is targeting Apple Business Essentials for small and medium businesses with up to 500 employees. The service launches today in the United States and will be available to SMBs for free while it is still in beta. When it exits beta in spring 2022, pricing will range from $3 per seat per month to $13 per seat per month. The pricing range takes into account the number of devices a user has as well as the amount of iCloud storage for the plan. Up to 2TB of iCloud storage is available on the highest-tier plan.

With its mobile device management service, Apple Business Essentials has a section called Collections within the app that employees can use to download apps that are required for their workflow, including Microsoft Office, Cisco Webex, and more.

“When employees sign in to their corporate or personally owned device with their work credentials, Collections automatically pushes settings such as VPN configurations and Wi-Fi passwords,” Apple detailed of its new service. “In addition, Collections will install the new Apple Business Essentials app on each employee’s home screen, where they can download corporate apps assigned to them, such as Cisco Webex or Microsoft Word.”

If an employee leaves, the Business Essentials service also makes it easy for SMB owners to reassign old devices to new users or issue new devices to new users.

Business Essentials is notable in that it will bring a more managed IT experience that employees at larger corporations have relied upon to the world of small businesses. In addition to device management and hardware support, Apple will also allow small businesses to bundle its AppleCare+ optional extended warranty services to Business Essentials starting in the spring. Employees will have access to two device repairs per year on their plan, and the repairs can be initiated directly within the Apple Business Essentials app. Apple will also offer on-site repair services in addition to mail-in repairs with its small business offering, and technicians can arrive on site in as little as four hours.

Apple has been making an aggressive push into its services business, which includes Apple Music. In its most recent earnings report, the company announced that its net sales from the services business grew by more than 27% year-over-year for the fiscal year ended September 25, 2021. Apple reported that its services businesses generated $68.4 billion, compared to $297.4 billion for products.

Editors' Recommendations

Chuong Nguyen
Silicon Valley-based technology reporter and Giants baseball fan who splits his time between Northern California and Southern…
The 6 best ways Macs work with your other Apple devices
A person holds an iPhone in front of a MacBook.

One of the best things about using more than one Apple device is the way they interact with each other. Apple has built all kinds of clever features into its famous ecosystem, and it means your devices all work together in a way that you just don’t get from any other manufacturer.

AirDrop might be the ultimate expression of this, though that's fairly well-known. Here, we’ve picked out six other great ways your Mac works with other Apple products. Most require you to have Bluetooth and Wi-Fi enabled, as well as for you to be using the same Apple ID on all your devices. Check the System Settings app on your devices to make sure the specific features are enabled, although most should be by default.

Read more
Here’s why I finally gave up on using Safari on my Mac
A MacBook owner using Google Sheets.

I have a web browser confession to make: I’m an inveterate tab hoarder. I’ve tried to change. I've tried to cull open tabs and tried to resist opening new ones -- but somehow the open tab counter just keeps on rising. At this point, I think I’m beyond saving.

What I’ve learned is that I need a web browser that can accommodate me, that has learned to accept my tab-based failings without judgement or chastisement. And after many years of trying, it turns out that Safari is not that browser.
The tab problem

Read more
Why I finally gave up and embraced Apple’s walled garden
Apple MacBook Pro 16 front view showing display and keyboard.

After decades as a diehard Windows user, I've made the switch to all-Apple computing. I ditched my Windows PC and laptop, my Android smartphone, and my Wear OS smartwatch for a MacBook Pro 16, iPad, iPhone, and Watch. I'm all in.

It's still early in the process, but the change has already been illuminating if incredibly costly — it's expensive to make such a significant change in platforms. The transition has required changes to how I get things done, but it's offered some distinct advantages that have made the investment a good one.
More power, less hassle

Read more