Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
Interesting

Is Apple Really Doing Badly In India?

IANS, 11 Jan, 2018 11:48 AM
    Given the current market conditions in India for smartphones, it appears that Steve Jobs, the late Apple co-founder, was prophetic: He did not consider this country a significant opportunity.
     
     
    Let's take a look at the Apple story since its entry into India in 2008. A lot has changed in the market -- changes that have been favourable for consumers and the industry but, perhaps, not so much for Apple. 
     
     
    In the decade since its arrival, almost all the segments -- barring the $100 to $200 segment -- have seen a decline in the competitive and price-sensitive Indian market. But what should concern the Cupertino-based iPhone-maker is the steep fall in the $400-and-above market.
     
     
    In 2008 and 2009, this segment used to account for 30 per cent of the total smartphone shipments. From 2010 onwards, around the time domestic brands made their entry in the ring, helping to expand the sub-$100 category, the premium segment fell to half at 15 per cent.
     
     
    Barring a spike in 2011, the $400-and-above market has been on the decline in terms of shipment contribution. In the period, whatever growth took place in the smartphone market, happened at the lower end of the price strata.
     
     
     
    Since 2013, the $400-plus market has been in single digits, and this is obviously not a good sign for a premium brand like Apple in India -- even if the iPhone SE is taken into account, which is more of a mid-premium smartphone and is now being assembled in Bengaluru.
     
     
    The big question now is: Has Apple's poor performance in India been on account of some loose ends in its strategy? Or is it merely because of the segment/s in which the Cupertino-based iPhone-maker operates?
     
     
    Let us examine the market share of Apple in the segments it operates in.
     
     
    Over its decade-long presence in the country, Apple has been operating in three price segments. Among these, $400-plus has been the staple where the tech giant has performed superbly.
     
     
    From just over five per cent share of the segment in 2008, when Apple said 'Namaste' to India, it currently enjoys over 47 per cent share in the $400-and-above smartphone segment by units.
     
     
     
    In terms of revenues, Apple has also seen consistent growth despite pressures like shrinking opportunities in the premium segment as well as falling average selling prices -- not the forget the "forced" downward movement to cater to the mid-premium segment.
     
     
    In 2017, till September end, there has been a 21 per cent revenue decline compared to the calendar year 2016. 
     
     
    But then, Apple has witnessed good annual growth rates since 2010 -- its average annual revenue growth rate has been 116 per cent in its first decade of presence in India.
     
     
    Both from the revenue as well as volume aspects, Apple has seen a consoling India story so far.
     
     
    The real issue is the growth in the premium segment with several players, incluing from China, now offering devices. This segment is going to see some difficult times ahead owing to the fact that, after Jio surfaced on the landscape, the opportunity now shifts towards the entry-level players to let a user have his or her first smartphone experience.
     
     
    In the era of "Desh Ka Smartphone" and "Mera Pehla Smartphone", it would be challenging for any premium smartphone brand, including Apple, to grow like in the past.
     
     
    The overall declining growth in all price segments of smartphone over the last decade or so, Apple's consistent growth in revenues as well as its increasing growth in market share in the segment(s) it is present, has an interesting story to tell.
     
     
     
    For Apple, revenues as well as its market standing is on the rise so far, as it faces the peculiar nature of the domestic market.
     
     
    Was Jobs able to foresee this peculiarity of the Indian smartphone market or was his interpretation something different?
     
     
    Whatever his interpretation, the impact for Apple is more or less the same.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    WATCH: Russian Model With World's Longest Legs Breaks Guinness Record

    WATCH: Russian Model With World's Longest Legs Breaks Guinness Record
    A Russian model has set a new Guinness world record for the longest legs - measuring an unparallelled 132 centimetres in length.

    WATCH: Russian Model With World's Longest Legs Breaks Guinness Record

    Modern-Day Casanova in Thailand Marries 120 Women And They All Know About Each Other

    Modern-Day Casanova in Thailand Marries 120 Women And They All Know About Each Other
    Polygamy is illegal in Thailand, but that didn't stop a modern-day Casanova from taking a whopping 120 wives and having 28 children with them. What's even more unusual is that the women all know about each other and are fine with the arrangement.

    Modern-Day Casanova in Thailand Marries 120 Women And They All Know About Each Other

    Man Dug A Tunnel From Home To The Pub And Drank Every Night While His Wife Slept

    Man Dug A Tunnel From Home To The Pub And Drank Every Night While His Wife Slept
    A plumber from Ireland, believed or not, dug a tunnel from his bedroom to a local pub, located 800 meters away from his home. 

    Man Dug A Tunnel From Home To The Pub And Drank Every Night While His Wife Slept

    Indonesian Man Creates Polygamy Dating App That Helps Men Find Multiple Wives

    Indonesian Man Creates Polygamy Dating App That Helps Men Find Multiple Wives
    After realizing that many of the men using online dating services were trying to find extra wives, an Indonesian software developer decided to make it easier for them by creating a dedicated polygamy dating app.

    Indonesian Man Creates Polygamy Dating App That Helps Men Find Multiple Wives

    Plastic Surgery Tourists Stuck in Airport Because Their Passports Don't Match Their Faces

    Plastic Surgery Tourists Stuck in Airport Because Their Passports Don't Match Their Faces
    Photos of three Chinese women allegedly stuck in a South Korean airport, because their passports no longer match their faces following plastic surgery, have been doing the rounds on Chinese social media.

    Plastic Surgery Tourists Stuck in Airport Because Their Passports Don't Match Their Faces

    Airconwatch - The World's First Personal Air-Conditioning Watch

    Airconwatch - The World's First Personal Air-Conditioning Watch
    The new Apple Watch may have better fitness tracking technology and spunkier bands, but can it regulate your body temperature? I don't think so, but the new Aircon Watch - the world's first personal A/C watch - claims it can.

    Airconwatch - The World's First Personal Air-Conditioning Watch