Maybe Apple's Switch campaign is working after all.
Apple reported their quarterly results yesterday, and noted that half of all mac sales were to people that did not own macs, thus Switchers. Many users on this forum say that Apple is doing badly Switching PC users, but this, in my opinion, proves that Apple is in fact doing pretty well.
Comments
jackasses at the apple stores (some not all)
pretty much kill any enthusiasm a person may have when
looking at apple products
And is the sales staff at Apple stores are anything like the staff at Apple resellers in Toronto (I'm thinking CSC at College and Spadina) then Apple needs to do a bit of "re-education" on their snooty asses.
If I were a potential switcher and some Apple rep gave me that "and what makes you think you're worthy of a mac" look I'd walk the fruck out and buy a Dell.
Things to worry about, lost education sales. Apple's drop off in edu has been staggering (as a percentage of marketshare)
Macs at school lead to a greater chance of macs at home. 5 years ago, I looked at a university an saw pretty much 50-50 Mac/PC split. The Edu faculty was exclusively mac based. Last year a new lab went in a new building. 300 PC's 60 eMacs. The edu faculty is now exclusively PC.
It's still more macs than you see in the day to day, but it's fallen from 1 in 2 to 1 in 10, and in elementary/high schools, with even less money, the drop off is even more profound. This will be paid over the next 3-10 years when students graduate NEVER having touched or seen a mac AT ALL, and have even less reason to wander over to the switchers side.
Try to have a little confidence, Matsu!
They were discussing it a while back:
http://endeavor.med.nyu.edu/student-...s/m011403.html
so that negates what happened at Matsu's Uni. sorta, depending on the relative cpu numbers of each school and all that.
just some more, worthless, anecdotal evidence.
edit: added link
until the rise of MacOS X, iLife and recent hardware it's always bothered me that Apple didn't utilize one of their greatest advantages over PC's - seamless integration. a reason why PC's are so hard to use is because they are frequently incompatible with their own software and peripherals. Apple finally took advantage of the fact that they make their own hardware and os.
the reason i am switching to a mac now and not in the past is because i can accomplish more and with less frustration. the mac is becoming an extension of myself instead of a separate tool that i have to fight with.
I just bought a 17" iMac, and coached a friend into buying the same...
Long time Mac loyalists trash the iMac, and Apple's strategy, but from where I'm sitting, it's working...
High-priced? Sure...But after 3 weeks of constant use it dawned on me that I hadn't had to reboot my iMac once...that everything I did worked exactly as I expected...that I looked forward to settling down in front of that beautfil machine; looking for music in iTunes MS, managing my iPod, making movies and burning DVD's...Everything is better with a Mac. I don't care if you've got an e-Mac or a G5, the machines (OSX) just flat out work...
To the long-time loyalists...This is your reward. It may never be demonstrated in marketshare, but the Apple cult is growing. Savor the fact that you were here when...
I'm going to continue to do my part by converting friends and family...I suggest many of you stop bitching and get out there and do the same!
ahem:
wrong:
half of all mac sales were to people that did not own a mac
correct:
According to Anderson, fifty percent of computer buyers at Apple?s stores did not currently own a Mac
http://www.macnn.com/feature.php?id=382
http://www.macminute.com/2003/07/16/conferencecall
read. think. write.
"Apple's slice of the overall U.S. PC market shrank to 2.9% in the first quarter, down from 3.2% two years earlier, says market tracker International Data Corp. But Apple has gained in consumer PC sales, especially with notebook computers. Apple's share of U.S. consumer PC unit sales rose to 3.4% in the first quarter, up from 1.9% two years earlier. Its share of dollars spent on consumer PCs rose from 2.3% to 5.2%."
SO can we stop saying that Apple's market share is below 2%?
The G5 WILL make a big difference in their sales this year. I think the marketshare slide will change direction. The Pro market has been suffering... pros have been waiting for the G5.
If they can keep hammering away at Dell's intrusion onto their old turf, and if the G5 and the point update to Quark 6 which finally makes it stable and the professional advocacy group recently established within Apple all contribute to a revived professional market, Apple can start making headway in overall market share. It's heartening to see the above consumer market share numbers, and also the nearly 6% market share in portables.
The skyrocketing iPod sales can't hurt, either. If the iTMS can literally quintuple iPod sales given its limited market, what will happen when it's rolled out for Windows?
Originally posted by seb
And NYU Medical just went all Macs - ok, a few PCs here and there. They'll be done putting em in later this year, from what I hear.
They were discussing it a while back:
http://endeavor.med.nyu.edu/student-...s/m011403.html
so that negates what happened at Matsu's Uni. sorta, depending on the relative cpu numbers of each school and all that.
just some more, worthless, anecdotal evidence.
edit: added link
Fine,
How about 2 universities (with over 100 000 students between them) and 4 Toronto Area school boards covering about, say 3 million residents?
See, and I am actually in a position to check this stuff out, and I can find out exactly how many macs schools aren't buying with just an e-mail.
It's sad actually, the state of tech in schools, and there is movement to make even K-6 "M$ only" because that's better for the "work-force" if you can believe that. To me that's a better argument NOT to have M$ in the classroom, but that's besides the point. With the prices such as they are, an number of cockeyed justifications will pass as reason enough to get rid of macs and put in cheaper PC's, this besides union issues that make an iron clad guarantee that teachers and board techs NEVER fall on the same side of the computer issue.
Apple is the 7th largest computer maker in the US. (in terms of sales.)