Apple's smartphone share closer to 13%, still ahead of Microsoft
Apple's share of the worldwide smartphone market is closer to 13% than the 16% reported earlier this week, but that's still good enough to push the iPhone maker past Microsoft to become the third largest smartphone OS vendor, according to Gartner.
The market research firm said Apple's progress came amid a dismal third quarter for the global smartphone market, when sales reached their weakest year-on-year growth since historical data exists. Smartphone sales to end-users totalled 36.5 million units during the three-month period ending September, a mere 11.5 percent increase from the same period one year ago.
"The current economic climate is negatively impacting sales of higher end devices,Â? said Roberta Cozza, principal analyst at Gartner. Â?Going forward, we should expect the smartphone device market to continue to grow but at a slower pace."
Although leading mobile operators like Apple are subsidizing more smartphones to reach lower prices, they tie the device to two year contracts with monthly data plan rates which remain too expensive for average consumers, Cozza added.
Smartphone device share
Nokia maintained its No. 1 position with 42.4 percent market share in the third quarter, but for the first time it recorded a decline in sales of 3 percent on a yearly basis. At the same time, sales of Research In MotionÂ?s BlackBerry smartphones increased 81.7 percent, and Gartner expects the company will see a boost from its new products, like the new touch-screen BlackBerry Storm, in the fourth quarter.
For its part, Apple watched sales of the iPhone soar an unprecedented 327.5 percent, good enough to regain the No. 3 position in the global smartphone market for hardware sales, improving its share to 12.9 percent.
Worldwide: Preliminary Smartphone Sales to End Users by Vendor, 3Q08 (Thousands of Units).
AppleÂ?s shipments into the channel during the quarter approached 7 million units, which included about 2 million units of inventory fill that remained unsold entering into the fourth quarter. Gartner said it factored this into its market share estimate, which is therefore about 3 percent less than the 16 percent estimate reported earlier this week by financial firm Needham & Co.
Smartphone OS share
In terms of smartphone operating system (OS) share, Symbian software shipped on 49.8 percent of smartphones sold during the third quarter, which represents the first time the company's share fell below the 50 percent mark. SymbianÂ?s share was most affected by a decline in sales from Nokia, and Gartner expects the mobile OS developer's slice of the pie will continue to erode next year
Meanwhile, blistering sales of iPhone 3G helped propel the Mac OS X into the No. 3 position fora global OS provider rankings.
Worldwide: Preliminary Smartphone Sales to End Users by Operating System, 3Q08 (Thousands of Units).
"For the first time, iPhone sales exceeded sales of Microsoft Windows Mobile devices worldwide and in North America," Gartner wrote in its report. "In the shorter term, open-source initiatives like Android and Symbian Foundation will challenge Windows MobileÂ?s licensing model. In addition, the lack of a competitive user interface will continue to limit MicrosoftÂ?s mobile device usability when facing competitive consumer smartphones."
Regionally
Regionally, North America was the fastest growing market, with a 68 percent increase in the third quarter. RIM and Apple led the region by combining for more than 70 percent of the smartphone sales, and Apple regained second position behind RIM with 25.4 percent share.
Smartphone sales in Europe, the Middle East and Africa (EMEA) increased 14 percent year-on-year. The region saw NokiaÂ?s share decline nearly 8 percentage points in the quarter but still maintaining its leading position while Apple gained the No. 2 spot with 15.6 percent share, moving in front of HTC and RIM.Â*
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The markets in Asia/Pacific and Japan declined 11 percent and 23 percent, respectively. In Latin America, despite the decline in sales for all handsets, the smartphone market grew 56 percent in the third quarter of 2008. The sales were bolstered by the official introduction of AppleÂ?s iPhone 3G across a dozen of countries, Gartner said.
The market research firm said Apple's progress came amid a dismal third quarter for the global smartphone market, when sales reached their weakest year-on-year growth since historical data exists. Smartphone sales to end-users totalled 36.5 million units during the three-month period ending September, a mere 11.5 percent increase from the same period one year ago.
"The current economic climate is negatively impacting sales of higher end devices,Â? said Roberta Cozza, principal analyst at Gartner. Â?Going forward, we should expect the smartphone device market to continue to grow but at a slower pace."
Although leading mobile operators like Apple are subsidizing more smartphones to reach lower prices, they tie the device to two year contracts with monthly data plan rates which remain too expensive for average consumers, Cozza added.
Smartphone device share
Nokia maintained its No. 1 position with 42.4 percent market share in the third quarter, but for the first time it recorded a decline in sales of 3 percent on a yearly basis. At the same time, sales of Research In MotionÂ?s BlackBerry smartphones increased 81.7 percent, and Gartner expects the company will see a boost from its new products, like the new touch-screen BlackBerry Storm, in the fourth quarter.
For its part, Apple watched sales of the iPhone soar an unprecedented 327.5 percent, good enough to regain the No. 3 position in the global smartphone market for hardware sales, improving its share to 12.9 percent.
Worldwide: Preliminary Smartphone Sales to End Users by Vendor, 3Q08 (Thousands of Units).
AppleÂ?s shipments into the channel during the quarter approached 7 million units, which included about 2 million units of inventory fill that remained unsold entering into the fourth quarter. Gartner said it factored this into its market share estimate, which is therefore about 3 percent less than the 16 percent estimate reported earlier this week by financial firm Needham & Co.
Smartphone OS share
In terms of smartphone operating system (OS) share, Symbian software shipped on 49.8 percent of smartphones sold during the third quarter, which represents the first time the company's share fell below the 50 percent mark. SymbianÂ?s share was most affected by a decline in sales from Nokia, and Gartner expects the mobile OS developer's slice of the pie will continue to erode next year
Meanwhile, blistering sales of iPhone 3G helped propel the Mac OS X into the No. 3 position fora global OS provider rankings.
Worldwide: Preliminary Smartphone Sales to End Users by Operating System, 3Q08 (Thousands of Units).
"For the first time, iPhone sales exceeded sales of Microsoft Windows Mobile devices worldwide and in North America," Gartner wrote in its report. "In the shorter term, open-source initiatives like Android and Symbian Foundation will challenge Windows MobileÂ?s licensing model. In addition, the lack of a competitive user interface will continue to limit MicrosoftÂ?s mobile device usability when facing competitive consumer smartphones."
Regionally
Regionally, North America was the fastest growing market, with a 68 percent increase in the third quarter. RIM and Apple led the region by combining for more than 70 percent of the smartphone sales, and Apple regained second position behind RIM with 25.4 percent share.
Smartphone sales in Europe, the Middle East and Africa (EMEA) increased 14 percent year-on-year. The region saw NokiaÂ?s share decline nearly 8 percentage points in the quarter but still maintaining its leading position while Apple gained the No. 2 spot with 15.6 percent share, moving in front of HTC and RIM.Â*
Â*
The markets in Asia/Pacific and Japan declined 11 percent and 23 percent, respectively. In Latin America, despite the decline in sales for all handsets, the smartphone market grew 56 percent in the third quarter of 2008. The sales were bolstered by the official introduction of AppleÂ?s iPhone 3G across a dozen of countries, Gartner said.
Comments
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C5oGaZIKYvo
I think Apple's going to have to move beyond the "one size fits all" approach to phones before they can attack the rest of the market. They need a smaller phone that doesn't do multitouch and has your basic keyboard or qwerty.
Any specific reason why people would find that desireable though? I mean, $199 is an incredibly agressive price-point for a device this functional (iPhone). Stripping features would just bring another cheap phone to an already flooded marketplace. No?
Edit: And isn't the point of a 'one-size fits all' product to fit all?
Jimzip
I think Apple's going to have to move beyond the "one size fits all" approach to phones before they can attack the rest of the market. They need a smaller phone that doesn't do multitouch and has your basic keyboard or qwerty.
I told them once North America hits the tipping point, smartphone growth would explode.
Regionally, North America was the fastest growing market, with a 68 percent increase in the third quarter. RIM and Apple led the region by combining for more than 70 percent of the smartphone sales, and Apple regained second position behind RIM with 25.4 percent share.
I think Apple's going to have to move beyond the "one size fits all" approach to phones before they can attack the rest of the market. They need a smaller phone that doesn't do multitouch and has your basic keyboard or qwerty.
Any specific reason why people would find that desireable though? I mean, $199 is an incredibly agressive price-point for a device this functional (iPhone). Stripping features would just bring another cheap phone to an already flooded marketplace. No?
Edit: And isn't the point of a 'one-size fits all' product to fit all?
The problem is usually one-size-fits-all is that it usually does so poorly, the product is not tailored to fit anyone but rather a set of compromises that wouldn't happen if different kinds of buyers got what fits their needs best. But here, iPhone is basically one model, two if you count capacity variations, but one form factor, and it's apparently outselling all of the MS platform phones combined, which does offer several kinds of form factors.
Maybe it would be nice to have a model with a physical keyboard for the people do a lot of text input, but there are trade-offs to do that, it's either a smaller screen or make it thicker and possibly less reliable to add a slide out keyboard.
Any specific reason why people would find that desireable though? I mean, $199 is an incredibly agressive price-point for a device this functional (iPhone). Stripping features would just bring another cheap phone to an already flooded marketplace. No?
The iPhone isn't $199, that is the subsided price, you pay the rest in your monthly network fees
Now that the iPhone is doing so well, few of the Europeans who used to deride the iPhone and North America are not actively posting anymore.
I told them once North America hits the tipping point, smartphone growth would explode.
No, I think you will find they just sick of the rabid Apple fanboys that hang out here at iPhone insider, heaven forbid you say something bad about the mighty Apple iPhone, and the small mobile network called the Americas.
The iPhone isn't $199, that is the subsided price, you pay the rest in your monthly network fees
And what do you pay for your data and voice plans?!
Based on AT&T and T-Mobile you pay the same voice and data monthly fee whether you buy a Blackberry, an iPhone, or any other free phone and whether you sign up for a contract or not. (Actually the iPhone data plan is $5 cheaper than others).
Based on your assumption, I didn't buy my P900 SE phone for $700, I bought it for $700 plus what ever I paid AT&T and T-Mobile for their voice and data plan since 2004 (around $720/year X 3 years = $2160 + $700 for the phone = $2860). I guess I should've just bought the phone and never use data and voice plan to save some money
The iPhone isn't $199, that is the subsided price, you pay the rest in your monthly network fees
But doesn't that apply to all the "subsidized" phones, smart or otherwise, sold by the various mobile phone carriers here in the U.S.?
And what do you pay for your data and voice plans?!
You are fixed to that network with a locked phone for the term of your contract, or you must pay a disconnection fee. What if you want to move to another network, or move country with your phone? Depending on the country you are in, some providers will charge you money to unlock the phone in contact as well.
But doesn't that apply to all the "subsidized" phones, smart or otherwise, sold by the various mobile phone carriers here in the U.S.?
Yes it does, but most people on this site will compare that subsidised price to the full price of other manufactures phones.
If you are tired of the iPhone why visit the iPhone section of an Apple enthusiast website. I don't go to Nokia enthusiast websites complaining about Nokia.
No, I think you will find they just sick of the rabid Apple fanboys that hang out here at iPhone insider, heaven forbid you say something bad about the mighty Apple iPhone, and the small mobile network called the Americas.
You are fixed to that network with a locked phone for the term of your contract, or you must pay a disconnection fee. What if you want to move to another network, or move country with your phone? Depending on the country you are in, some providers will charge you money to unlock the phone in contact as well.
As you said they will charge you money for unlock or breaking the contract not because you bought a blackberry or an iPhone for $199. For example, I need to pay the same fee if I want to cancel one of my family plan phones even though I paid full price for the phone itself.
It is really simple, any smart phone = need voice and data plan = you pay monthly fee regardless of carrier = $1700+ over two years with or without contract or whether locked or not. How much you pay a month has nothing to do with your contract obligation. Even if you travel overseas you will pay money for data and voice. Choice have nothing to do with money here. Yes you might be saving $5 a month if you use another carrier, but you will still pay close to $65 for data and voice with T-Mobile (the only other choice).
I understand that in Europe some carriers calculate how much you pay for a phone based on your monthly plan. But that doesn't mean that everyone else is doing it.
Yes it does, but most people on this site will compare that subsidised price to the full price of other manufactures phones.
Come on!! you are trying to say that $500 Nokia or SE is as attractive to customers as $199 iPhone or BB?! You still pay $300 more with a $500 phone (In the US that is).
Come on!! you are trying to say that $500 Nokia or SE is as attractive to customers as $199 iPhone or BB?! You still pay $300 more with a $500 phone (In the US that is).
You'd be silly to pay $500 for an unlocked phone from Europe unless you could sell your contract phone for a decent price or could get some kind of discount on the contract.
Obviously things are very different in other countries (aka the other 5.7 billion people on the planet).