Apple Watch went on sale on April 24, and in just four months, it's
already upending the wearables market according to International Data
Corporation (IDC), a technology analyst firm.
Wearables shipments numbered 18.1 million units in the second quarter
of 2015, a whopping 223.2 percent improvement compared to the 5.6
million devices shipped during the same year-ago period. Fitbit took the
crown with shipments of 4.4 million units while Apple came in a close
second with 3.6 million Watches shipped.
"About two of every three smart wearables shipped this quarter was an
Apple Watch," observed Jitesh Ubrani, Senior Research Analyst for IDC
Mobile Device Trackers, in a statement. "Apple has clearly garnered an
impressive lead in this space and its dominance is expected to
continue."
Fitbit's reign at the top of the wearables market looks to be
short-lived, according to Ubrani. He added that "it's worth noting that
Fitbit only sells basic wearables – a category that is expected to lose
share over the next few years, leaving Apple poised to become the next
market leader for all wearables."
Apple's arrival onto the scene serves as a catalyst for the wearables
industry as a whole, asserted IDC research manager Ramon Llamas. "Its
participation benefits multiple players and platforms within the
wearables ecosystem, and ultimately drives total volumes higher," he
said in a statement.
The Cupertino, Calif. device maker is also forcing rivals to up their
game. "Apple also forces other vendors – especially those that have
been part of this market for multiple quarters – to re-evaluate their
products and experiences," Llamas continued.
Third-place Xiaomi, with shipments of 3.1 million units or 17.1
percent of the market, "made a fairly big splash" with its inexpensive
Mi Band last year, according to IDC. "Since then its growth has been
unstoppable in China as the vendor was quick to introduce rock-bottom
prices," although its limited distribution setup present a challenge for
the company, noted IDC.
GPS specialist Garmin took fourth place with shipments of 700,000
wearables aimed at "citizen athletes." Rounding out the top five was
Samsung with 600,000 units, or 3.3 percent of the market. To improve its
lot, the Korean electronics giant may need to widen its horizons,
suggested IDC.
"Given Samsung's history of making its latest wearable devices
compatible only with Samsung's top models and nearly exclusive reliance
on Tizen, the company has limited its potential reach. Whether that
trend continues with the Gear S2 will bear close observation," stated
the research firm.
Friday, 18 November 2016
Apple Quickly Catching Up to Fitbit in Wearables War: IDC
More Articles
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
EmoticonEmoticon