Appleâs next big growth market could be India â" a country where it has failed to find significant purchase with consumers up until this point. The Economic Times [1] Â (via @ScepticGeek [2] ) is reporting that sales of Apple devices, with iPhones leading the way, rose by between 300 and 400 percent in the past quarter. That growth, identified by research firm IDC, is likely being propelled by Appleâs distribution partnerships with Redington and Ingram Micro.
According to Convergence Catalyst founder Jayanth Kolla in conversation with the Economic Times, Appleâs strategy in India mirrors the route it took to success in China; the company spent time studying the market, learned what it needed to do to sell handsets in India and then got aggressive about executing its sales strategy. Appleâs India team grew by 500 percent in six months to help make that happen, going from 30 to 150 people, Kolla says.
Appleâs strategy in India hasnât involved fielding a lower cost device, but it has included making its iPhone more attainable for cost-conscious buyers. Thatâs being done through installment-based payment schemes operated through its resale partners, including one with TheMobileStore, a national Indian retail chain, which that companyâs CEO says has helped increase sales of Apple gadgets three-fold in the past year.
Three- or four-fold growth in a single quarter is definitely impressive, but Apple has to make up a considerable gulf in India. According to recent figures from IDC [3] , Samsung had a 46 percent market share in India between July and September 2012, and Apple didnât even show up in the top five, with HTC rounding out that crowd with a relatively small 6.6 percent. Browsing stats show that Apple has only a tiny percentage of current mobile web traffic [4] in the country, and the most recent IDC numbers for mobile operating systems show a meager 1.4 percent share of sales [5] in the July through September 2012 quarter.
Last year, during an Apple quarterly conference call, CEO Tim Cook said [6] that while he âlove[s]â India, he said they didnât see much opportunity there in the short-term and would be focusing on other market where there was more growth potential for the time being. Part of the reason for his hesitation was the distribution system in that country, he said at the time. But a fresh injection of local Apple staff, and a distribution model that is beginning to find its legs could signal that Cook and Apple are finally willing to put in the time and effort to grow their presence in India, where there is reportedly currently less than 10 percent smartphone penetration.
April 1, 1976
NASDAQ:AAPL
Started by Steve Jobs, Steve Wozniak, and Ronald Wayne, Apple has expanded from computers to consumer electronics over the last 30 years, officially changing their name from Apple Computer, Inc. to Apple, Inc. in January 2007. Among the key offerings from Appleâs product line are: Pro line laptops (MacBook Pro) and desktops (Mac Pro), consumer line laptops (MacBook Air) and desktops (iMac), servers (Xserve), Apple TV, the Mac OS X and Mac OS X Server operating systems, the iPod, the...
Links
- ^ The Economic Times (economictimes.indiatimes.com)
- ^ @ScepticGeek (twitter.com)
- ^ recent figures from IDC (www.business-standard.com)
- ^ current mobile web traffic (www.medianama.com)
- ^ 1.4 percent share of sales (cdn.idc.asia)
- ^ CEO Tim Cook said (articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com)
- ^ â' Learn more (www.crunchbase.com)
No comments:
Post a Comment