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Katie Lewis, Yankee
Group: iOS poised to gain share in the next 6 months
January 9, 2012
U.S.
smartphone adoption is expected to surge to 175 million devices by 2015,
but even in a booming market, many mobile OS vendors have an uphill
battle ahead, Yankee Group finds. In its new report, "The Runaway
Smartphone Landscape," Yankee Group cautions that while Apple's iOS and
Google's Android are sitting pretty with two-thirds of the market, HP's
webOS, Microsoft's Windows Mobile and Nokia's Symbian are being left
behind.
The report finds:
-
As
expected, iOS and Android dominate. Over 80 percent of
consumers intend to buy an iPhone or Android-powered device over the
next six months. iOS is the only contender set to win share over that
time frame.
- RIM and Microsoft are
struggling to sell new smartphones--even to their current base.
Twenty percent of U.S. consumers own a RIM BlackBerry, but only 12
percent intending to buy a smartphone in the next six months will
purchase a BlackBerry device. Similarly, 14 percent of consumers own a
Windows Mobile-based device, but only 9 percent of those intending to
buy a smartphone in the next six months say they will go with Windows
Mobile.
- Symbian and HP WebOS
aren't even in the race. Fewer than 2 percent of those planning
to buy a smartphone in the next six months want a Nokia or Palm.
"Opportunities within
the smartphone market abound, but we've reached a critical point where
graves could be dug for several OS vendors," said Katie Lewis, Yankee
Group associate analyst and author of the report. "Consumer decisions
made in the next three years are likely to seal the fate, good or bad,
of many OSs. Now is the time for these vendors to fight for survival." |