We’ve mentioned in our blog a couple of times now that the New York
Times called mobile marketing “the most powerful medium ever invented”
and stories from highly credible news publications continue to paint
this picture. Towards the end of last year, major online tech and
marketing publication, Techcrunch even called the surge in mobile
technology an “unstoppable rise of the smartphone”. Data analysis prior
to marketing budget allocation can often be tedious, but this is one
market shift which is much more obvious than most.
Recently, information released by global market research firm,
the Information Data Corporation (IDC) demonstrated how sales in
personal computing have hit an all-time low since it started tracking
these metrics in 1994. Towards the end of 2010, the total market share
of what IDC describes as “smart connected devices” which was owned by
PC’s was about 23%. In just 2 years, this dropped to an all-time low of
just 12% in 2012.
While laptops have increased in popularity through the early
stages of this millennia, their market share also plummeted from 29%,
right down to just 17% in the same timeframe. Meanwhile, tablet devices
surge in popularity, almost quadrupling in market share, rising from
3% up to 11%. The already-dominating smartphone share grew from a
massive 45% right up to 60% of the total market share.
What Does This Mean for Your Marketing Budget?
If you’re a desktop computer fan, as many of our team are,
it’s sad to see the decline of the platform. Companies such as
Hewlett-Packard have experienced a 24% drop in sales during this
period, another highly significant indicator. Interestingly, back in
2010 at the release of the original iPad, Apple mastermind Steve Jobs
stated in an interview with journalists that we were entering a
“post-PC era”.
While this comment was met with some scepticism and widely
regarded as marketing hype just a couple of short years ago, we’re now
undeniably seeing the realisation of this prediction.
Why are PC Sales Dropping so Drastically?
It’s clear that the evolutionary turning point of the
smartphone represented by the first Apple iPhone in 2007 was a major
turning point which led us to the present situation. Back in 2006 and
the years prior, shopping, video, gaming, e-mail, social networks and
other communication was simply impractical on mobile devices and this
was as much due to poor interface design as hardware limitations.
In an interview with BBC journalists, a BCG Partner analyst
also struck out to Microsoft’s Windows 8 as being partially to blame for
the drop in PC sales. Colin Gillis even went as far to say that the
news was “horrific” for desktop computing and that it’s now “all about
mobile.”
Looking to the Future
These market research figures show PC sales for the present,
but what about the future? Well, according to many market research and
statistical analyst’s data published in established publications
including Forbes magazine, it’s estimated that smartphones alone will
exceed 1.5 billion units sold each year by 2016. Techcrunch was not
overstating things when it used the words “unstoppable rise”. Watch
this space for further market updates and news analysis from www.mobile-application-developer.com
If you are not sure what should be the best mobile application strategy for you business then please contact us for free consultation service
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