From Distimo (registration required):
- The number of applications in the Apple App Store has grown from just under 200,000 in April 2010 to over 300,000 in October 2010. Continue reading “14 Percent of App Store apps target the iPad”
From Distimo (registration required):
Given the large number of articles written in the last week on market data, I built a navigation table and posted it in a page that is easy to access:
You can find it under the ADDs tab at the top of the site.
Cells marked with “x” are work in progress.
Following-up on the profitability discussion for the top eight vendors, I built a chart to show estimated profit capture from smartphones, further dividing the vendors into inter-dependent (own OS) and modular (licensed OS)[1]. Continue reading “How much profit did vendors capture from Android-powered phones?”
If we look at the growth of smartphones independently from all phones, the category looks impressive: Continue reading “What do you have to believe for an Android dominated future?”
[Wedge Partners analyst Brian Blair] also contends that Apple’s production forecasts suggest the company thinks it can sell 100 million iPhones next year. “While a staggering number any way you look at it, our checks reflect full calendar 2010 builds in the 48-50 million unit range,” he writes. “While this number can change and adjust downward or upward based on demand, we believe it is incredibly bullish that Apple feels it is possible that they could see nearly 100% year over year growth for iPhone in 2011 as this would mean that exiting 2011, Apple would have approximately 10% share in the global handset market.”
via Apple Can Sell 100M iPhones, 48M iPads in 2011, Analyst Says – Tech Trader Daily – Barrons.com.
Apple is, in my estimate, likely to sell at least 47 million iPhones in calendar 2010. (16 million in the current quarter, or 85% y/y growth).
The 100 million in 2011 estimate assumes 100% growth on average. Is it really “staggering” to forecast another year of triple digit growth? Continue reading “Competing with non-consumption: Can Apple sell 100M iPhones next year?”
In previous posts I detailed shares for units, sales and profits. I also offered different ways to look at the data like rankings and profit “area” maps.
This article is about the absolute numbers. What is the total market in terms of units sold, sales and operating profits.
The time frame remains from the second quarter in 2007 to the third quarter of 2010. The same eight vendors are analyzed (with “Other” available for units analysis only). Continue reading “Absolute value: the handset market stacked”
Take a look at this chart. It combines the known shipment data with the total market size for smartphones as defined by Canalys.
Knowing the platform/vendor make-up we can estimate the percent of the market that was Android. Continue reading “Estimating Android market share for the third quarter”
There is some confusion with the latest Canalys teaser press release. The implication is that Apple has lost smartphone platform share due to the Android surge.
Using the published data, it’s easy to see that Apple has continued to increase share in both smartphones and handsets as a whole.
I used green bars to represent quarterly share of smartphones and blue bars to represent quarterly share of all phones.
I used orange line to show trailing four quarters (TTM) share in regular phones and red for smartphones. Continue reading “iPhone's smartphone share continues to rise”
In the mobile phone industry, and indeed, in most technology sectors, price decline is a fact of life. Component prices tend to drop while their performance increases. This rapid obsolescence drives prices down constantly. Competition also plays a part as undifferentiated products are rapidly imitated.
This phenomenon has its own term: price erosion. It’s built into most business plans and forecasts.
But how real is it? What are the implications in terms of market share if one accelerates price erosion or reverses it?
This chart shows the average selling price for all the vendors whose data I maintain over a period of time. Continue reading “What's the opposite of price erosion?”
The following chart shows the third quarter’s profitability of eight top phone vendors as a measure of phones sold multiplied by profit per phone. Continue reading “Making it up in volume? How to view unit profitability vs. volume in handsets”