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Apple Takes 17% Smartphone Market Share

November 12, 2009

A new report out from Gartner indicates that Apple ranked third in worldwide smartphone sales in Q3 2009. The seven million iPhones sold by Apple in 3Q09 earned it a 17.1% share of the global smartphone market.

Meanwhile, Nokia’s share of the smartphone market reached an all time low in the 3Q09 at 39%, compared with 45% in 2Q09. This caused the Symbian OS to lose ground too, while RIM reached 20% share, its highest yet.

Worldwide Smartphone Sales to End Users in 3Q09

Vendor Sales (thousands of units) Market Share (%)
Nokia 16,156 39.3
RIM 8,552 20.8
Apple 7,040 17.1
HTC 2,659 6.5
Samsung 1,320 3.2
Others 5,368 13.1
Total 41,067 100

In the smartphone OS market, Symbian finished first with 44.6%, while RIM’s BlackBerry OS finished second with 20.8%, and the iPhone finished third with 17.1%. Android picked up momentum but with only a handful of Android devices available, its share remained modest at 3.5%. Sales of smartphones running the Window Mobile OS declined by 20% to 7.9% of the total smartphone OS market in the third quarter.

Apple Enables “Freemium” Model for iPhone Apps

October 16, 2009

Apple said that it will let iPhone application developers offer their users the option to buy additional content or features within a free app on its App Store. In an email sent Thursday to registered iPhone developers, Apple said in-app purchase options are now available for all software in its App Store: “You can also simplify your development by creating a single version of your app that uses In App Purchase to unlock additional functionality, eliminating the need to create Lite versions of your app,” the email reads.

Apple introduced in-app microstransactions for premium apps in March–developers can market new levels in an iPhone game, additional chapters or books in an ebook app or new tools in productivity apps. However, that meant pricing apps at a minimum of 99 cents.

Developers say that the latest announcement helps in two ways. First, it makes it much easier for them to make a business out of free apps. Until now, developers sold ads within their free apps or tried to convert users to a paid version with more content. The new capability could also help clean up the App Store because it would make it less necessary to offer both a free “lite” version and a paid version of the same app, a strategy that many developers used to try to make money.

Source: Wall Street Journal

Android Market Sales Gloom

September 1, 2009

AdMob recently estimated that there are some $200 million worth of applications sold in Apple’s iPhone store every month, or about $2.4 billion a year, whereas the Android market is worth a paltry $5M. Larva Labs claims that the total is probably much lower.

Matt Hall lists some of the shortcomings currently plaguing the Android Market:

  • No screenshots
  • 325 character application description maximum
  • Google checkout only way to buy
  • Hard to find paid apps
  • Various intermittent problems like failed or stalled downloads, credit card verification delays that look like stalled downloads, and other problems.

It seems that Android developers are seeing some really pathetic sales figures from the Android Market. Larva Labs, one of the top-selling Android developer saw an average of $62 per day in Android Market sales for August 2009.

Will Legacy Smartphone Platforms Keep-up with iPhone and Android?

August 26, 2009

BlackBerry OS, Windows Mobile and Symbian/S60 were designed years ago – the traditional strengths of these software platforms are rapidly becoming liabilities in the fast-paced smartphone market. Guest blogger Michael Vakulenko answers a critical question: are user interface face-lifts, application stores or even going open source enough for the legacy smartphone platforms to stand-up to the challenges posed by iPhone and Android?

A blog post by Michael Vakulenko

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Operators made no profits from the iPhone

August 18, 2009

The launch of the iPhone (and iPhone 3G, and iPhone 3GS…) created a well hyped buzz all over the world. Operators were struggling to get exclusivity for offering the devices, and device sales were high. In France, the right to offer the iPhones even got to a legal action, when Bouygues Telecom issued a complaint against the exclusivity agreement that Orange had with Apple, resulting in a court ruling that allowed all the three French mobile operators to sell the iPhone. Only in the last quarter (Q2 2009), Apple sols 5.2 million iPhone devices.

However, a recent report by the Copenhagen-based Strand Consult indicates that none of the operators who sell the iPhone made any profit of this: “According to the research we have conducted on the operators, not one of these have increased their market share, revenue, or their earnings as a result of introducing the iPhone” says the report. “On the contrary, some operators have sent out profit warnings because of the iPhone”

The first operator who offered the iPhone worldwide, the US AT&T, who still have exclusivity in the US, indicated that their second quarter earnings fell 15 percent year over year, as the highly successful launch of Apple’s iPhone 3GS — a phone subsidized by AT&T — affected the company’s bottom line.

On the positive side, not mentioned in the Strand Consult report, AT&T also reported more than 2.4 million iPhone activations in the second quarter, and 37.2 percent increase in wireless data revenues to $3.4 billion, more than double the total for the second quarter two years earlier. The iPhone probably had a positive impact on these results.

In Asia, the SingTel group, which is the largest in South East Asia, has reported falling profits due to iPhone launches, saying the iPhone alone hurt operating profit margin by 3-4 percentage points.

In Northern Europe, TeliaSonera showed no positive progress due to the iPhone sales, and the ARPU in Denmark has declined from 212 Danish crowns to 168 crowns over last two years, a stronger fall than their competitors. In Sweden TeliaSonera had a small market-share loss and a fall in ARPU.

The reports claims that the operators agreed to heavily subsidize the iPhones, hoping to reap benefits later, but this did not happen, and is not likely to happen in the future, as Apple are moving away from exclusivity deals, as happened in France.

The report also indicates that the other handset manufacturers are catching up with the iPhone, offering similar functionalities.

In my view, in addition to the above, the Apple iTunes/App Store model, is another reason for the loss of revenues by the operators, which are likely to create additional discontent by both operators, users and application developers.

Report by Reuters

Report: Android and iPhone Apps Prices Close Except for Reference

August 8, 2009

A new report by Distimo, a mobile app store analytics firm, compares the pricing of applications in Google’s Android Marketplace and Apple’s App Store. Distimo’s July report concludes that pricing of applications in the Apple App Store and Android Market is quite similar, except for the Reference category which has a much higher average price on Google Android Market.

Average Category Prices

The report found that while the average price in the “Most Popular Game” category between the two stores is quite similar, the price distribution is not. The number of 99-cent apps in this category at the Apple App store far outweigh the number at Google Android Marketplace.

The most popular games on the Android Marketplace went between 99 cents and $5.99, with most going for $2.99. However, while most popular games on the App Store went for 99 cents, the store also featured a higher-end set, which was priced between $6.99 and $9.99.

As of late, Android has received praise for its growing catalog of applications and faithful following of developers. Recent analyst estimates put the Android catalog at somewhere around 6,000, a distant second behind the Apple App Store, which currently boasts 65,000 applications.

However, many observers say that Apple’s App Store numbers are inflated due to a large number of generally useless applications. Tech Crunch recently reported on the ousting of developer Khalid Shaikh, founder of Perfect Acumen, and the App Store’s third most prolific developer. According to the report, Shaikh had published some 900 applications to the App Store, all of which were removed upon the revocation of his license to develop for Apple’s store. The applications, which saw an average price of $4.99, were simple aggregation apps that consolidated Web content on subjects ranging from Michael Jackson to professional wrestling.

Apple recently has received a lot of criticism surrounding the App Store’s approval process, which is in stark contrast to the “wild west” approach over at Android.

Source

Apple release iPhone OS 3.1 Beta 3 to Developers

July 28, 2009

Mac News

Apple just released to the iPhone developers community the iPhone OS 3.1 Beta 3 as well as a new version of the iPhone SDK 3.1, Beta 3.

Both downloads are available to registered developers through the Apple iPhone Dev Center.

Apple Releases iPhone SDK 3.1 Beta 2 to Developers

July 18, 2009

iPhone SDK 3.1 beta 2 and iPhone OS 3.1 beta 2 are now available for developers. iPhone SDK 3.1 b2

Apple App Store Exceeds 1.5 Billion Downloads

July 18, 2009

Apple announced that consumers have now downloaded more than 1.5 billion iPhone and iPod touch applications over the previous 12 months. The App Store currenlty offers more than 65,000 apps in 77 countries.

Will Apple Pass Nokia in the Smartphone Market?

July 18, 2009

A new research by Generator Research claims that iPhone will become dominant player in the smartphone market in 2012. This research predicts that Nokia will fall from about 40% share today to just 20% in 2013. iPhones, meanwhile, should accelerate and hit 33% of the market at the same point. Apple would match Nokia’s share sometime in 2011 and ship as many as 77 million phones that year.

Generator Research seems to ignore other players and platforms in the smartphone market, such as RIM/Blcakberry, Microsoft/WinMo, Google/Android and Palm/WebOS.

Global Smartphone Market Prediction

Global Smartphone Market Prediction

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