2013-10-31



Clive Darra


Nov. 12 - 13, 2013
San Francisco, CA

Tickets On Sale Now

Global phone shipments are over 418 million, smartphone shipments hit a record 250 million, and Android has captured a record 81 percent global market share.

All in the third quarter of 2013.

“Android’s domination of global smartphone shipments reached a new peak in Q3 2013, with four out of every five smartphones now running Google’s OS,” Strategy Analytics analyst Scott Bicheno said in a statement. “Android’s gain came mainly at the expense of BlackBerry, which saw its global smartphone share dip from 4 percent to 1 percent in the past year due to a weak lineup of BB10 devices. Apple also lost some ground to Android because of its limited presence at the lower end of the smartphone market.”

In other words, no cheap iPhone.



Meanwhile, Microsoft’s Windows Phone platform continues to grow, although on an as-yet small base. Microsoft shipped more than 10 million smartphones in a quarter for the first time ever in its history, Strategy Analytics said, and doubled its global market share in the last year.

“Microsoft grew its smartphone shipments by 178 percent annually in Q3 2013, and it is currently the world’s fastest growing major smartphone platform,” Strategy Analytics’ Neil Mawston said.

Overall, the market grew 45.5 percent, even faster than 2012′s torrid 44 percent. Android’s market share jumped up to 81.3 percent, from 75 percent last year — and up from last quarter — while Apple’s slid from 15.6 percent in Q3 2012 to 13.4 percent this year. BlackBerry, on the other hand, lost over 75 percent of its market share, dropping to a single digit: 1 percent.
In light of Microsoft’s recent performance, that Nokia purchase may just make a lot of sense after all.

“Microsoft’s growth is almost entirely due to Nokia and its steadily improving Lumia portfolio across Europe, Asia, and the United States,” Mawston said.

Apple can take comfort, of course, in knowing that for most of the third quarter, anyone who knew anything about smartphones was waiting for the iPhone 5S and 5C to come out before making a purchase, so its numbers were likely artificially depressed and will rebound next quarter.

Still, a lack of a real threat at the low end of the market will continue to cost Apple market share, and while the company doesn’t measure success on market share, over time huge deficits in market share can only, you would have to believe, result in an inability to maintain an absolutely top-notch ecosystem — and a concurrent loss of value to the members of that ecosystem (iPhone owners).

Which then presents a long-term challenge to Apple — and to its investors. Almost a year ago I asked, “Can anyone tell me why this is not Mac vs PC all over again?”

I’m still asking.

At what market share percentage does Apple’s ability to maintain a competitive app, media, and accessories ecosystem start to decline? I asked Mawston.

Here’s his answer:

We estimate a marketshare level below 10 percent globally is when developers and operators start to get a little twitchy about supporting smartphone or tablet platforms. At less than 10 percent share, mobile platforms can start to lose the network effect. Consumers tend to follow the herd and they will generally be drawn toward the largest pools of users and away from the smaller pools over time. Apple has a very loyal, wealthy customer base, so Apple remains in good shape for now, but if the company’s global smartphone and tablet marketshare starts to drift below the 10 percent level at any time in the future, then alarm bells will start ringing.

Apple CEO Tim Cook may care more about making great products than getting great market share — although he’s not shy about boasting when Apple does attain instances of dominant share — but he may not be able to make great products if Apple doesn’t start gaining more share.

    

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