3:11 AM - Forecast Apple iPad 2011
Apple iPad blamed for plunging laptop sales
A recent report by Morgan Stanley researcher Katy Huberty has many in the gadget world snarling and gnashing their teeth: the laptop market is plummeting. The culprit? Apple iPad. iPad popularity is causing laptop demand to dive.
An
unpleasant picture for notebook sales has been painted. Notebook
sales were on a steady upward trajectory in late 2009 before
tanking in January 2010, corresponding directly, with Steve Jobs'
unveiling of the iPad. It is estimated that the iPad has
cannibalized notebook sales by as much as 50%.
But can
there truly be a causal relationship, considering the fact that
Jobs didn't introduce the iPad until January 27 in 2010? The
timing would suggest that something else caused a whole month of
capsizing sales. And, can we really lump iPad-consumers in with
notebook consumers as one and the same?
After all,
while the iPad has lots of cool features - like watching cool
videos with
video
converter for ipad to convert and reading online
publications - it's hard to imagine that it can be that easy to
use for hardcore laptop users that need to type fast and do some
spreadsheets work.
What really
gets cannibalized - iPod Touch?
Similar fun-sized hand-held devices, on the other hand, are liable to get swallowed up in the iPad storm. While laptops typically have a more functional purpose, the netbook, which one might describe as a smaller, lamer laptop, floats somewhere in that middle ground between functionality and frivolity, it is also getting sucked into the iPad vortex.
Netbook
sales had seen some monstrous growth in 2009, peaking out at 641%
year-over-year growth in July. And then suddenly, people realized
that netbooks are lame, and down went the sales. But when the
blame on the iPad, there doesn't appear to be any direct
correlation between the introduction of the iPad and the tanking
netbook sales. Netbooks were on their way out when they took a
dive in October 2009, dropping nearly 400%. They gave a couple of
postmortem kicks in November, but then face-planted again in
January.
Ironically,
Apple's own iPod Touch appears to be on a crash-course for
disaster. According to Huberty's research, the iPad is on track
to cannibalize iPod Touch sales by over 40%. Again, this is
another case of bound-to-happen.
While the
iPod Touch has many of the same capabilities as the iPhone, minus
the smothering monthly phone bill, why would you want to carry
around two devices that look like a phone-only one isn't a phone?
At its core it's really just the iPad's uglier, less athletic
little brother.
Also on the
horizon for iPad cannibalization: desktop PCs, which Huberty's
report projects will see some 27% of its sales go to the
iPad.
While it
seems a little bombastic to suddenly assume that the iPad is
going to take the place of desktop PCs and laptops, in terms of
price range and portability, it would make sense for someone to
go home with an iPad over a laptop if they already own a
functional computer. Laptops and tablets are certainly not the
same thing, but if it's portability that the consumer is after, a
one-pound iPad makes a lot more sense than a laptop that weighs
as much as a baby.
If the
iPad's popularity continues to come at the expense of laptop
demand, this will become increasingly evident as the tablet
market begins to flourish with tablets from Dell, Motorola, and
Samsung.
Kindle will
crumple under iPad
The debut of the iPad earlier in 2010 threatened to throw a wrench into the gears of e-readers like Amazon's Kindle. Some 28% of eReader sales will also get sucked up by the iPad. Apple sold three million iPads in 80 days (which is one million more units than the Kindle is rumored to have sold in 2009) and more than 14 million units for 2010. With the iPad 2 on the horizon, the Kindle will have to keep dropping its price to keep up
My
unsolicited forecast for 2011 is that once the iPad 2 becomes
available, the price will drop as was the case for the iPhone.
Apple is rumored to be shoring up the last remaining original
iPads to sell while awaiting the debut of the iPad 2, and the
price-tag on the original units will no doubt be significantly
reduced, which will send sales through the roof-as we saw with
the iPhone 3GS when the iPhone 4 arrived on the market.
However
Apple plans to cut the price, once it does, consumers will have
no reason to prefer the Kindle over the iPad. With the iPad's
e-reader capability and myriad other functions, the Kindle will
be rendered obsolete-that is, unless it, too, drops its price,
which it likely will. Amazon will be forced to go lower and
lower, and it's my belief that within the next year or so, the
price of the Kindle will drop below $100 to keep up with
ever-increasing iPad sales.
iPad on
Top
Amid indications that Apple Inc. is ratcheting up its iPad production targets to meet booming demandï¼iPad's mass sales also stimulate the sale of third-party company's products, like iPad case, iPad bag, video converter like mac ipad video converter. It is predicted that Apple will ship 12.9 million iPads in 2010, an increase from the previous forecast issued April 2nd of 7.1 million units. Shipments will rise to 36.5 million in 2011 and 50.4 million in 2012.
Apple has
hiked its iPad manufacturing goals to suppliers across Asia. As
iSuppli stated in its initial forecast, the key to continuing
success will be how quickly Apple responds to issues as they
arise and whether the company can align suppliers to meet demand
needs. iSuppli's original iPad forecast was by far the most
aggressive outlook for the product among industry analysis and
market research firms issuing outlooks at the time. Apple's
acceleration of its component demand indicates that the company
has raised its iPad production target for 2010. The latest
research indicates there is much higher production than
previously expected for two key components: LCD panels and NAND
flash.
iPad Ad
Infinitum
It is believed that the only limitation on iPad sales now is production-not demand. Apple has taken a very controlled approach introducing this product to new markets, with manufacturing limitations likely being the major inhibitor on how quickly iPad sales expand.
To drive
continued sales growth, Apple undoubtedly will refresh the iPad's
features in April 2011. Likely additional changes will embrace an
internal camera and expansion of the product line, potentially
including additional screen sizes.
Nonetheless, with nearly 84 percent share in 2010, Apple's iPad
virtually owns the market, and the device is expected to dominate
at least through 2012.