WARC, 28 September 2011
NEW YORK: Nearly a fifth of consumers in China, the UK and
US now own a tablet, up from less than 5% late last year, according to a new
report.
Citigroup, the financial services provider, surveyed 1,800 people
in these three nations, and found the proportion of respondents possessing
slate devices had grown from 3% to 18% since November 2010.
Penetration has reached 21% in China, ahead of 17% for
Britain and America. Similarly, 26% of the Chinese sample were "very
likely" to purchase a tablet, falling to 12% for both the UK and US.
Citigroup's analysis revealed 31% of its panel were at least
somewhat keen to buy such a gadget, versus 14% late last year. In all, 77% of
this group would like to obtain an iPad, climbing from 73% in the same period.
Alternatives powered by Microsoft Windows witnessed a slide
from 52% to 40%, and equivalents utilising Google's Android operating system
enjoyed a two-percentage point gain, to 38%.
Price remained the "primary inhibitor" to greater
uptake, mentioned by 39% of adults questioned, although a "lack of
functionality" when compared with PCs was another common factor.
A 62% share of tablet owners saw it as a
"toy/gadget", growing from 44% in 2010. Meanwhile, 18% had acquired
one for work, a lift from 13%, while giving someone the device as a gift logged
18%, down from 27%.
Overall, 94% of iPad owners have downloaded apps, with 63%
accessing 11 or more such tools, totals standing at 79% and 37% in turn for
individuals using competing products.
Thus far, 81% of the iPad population have paid for
applications, measured against just 43% of customers for rival brands. Equally,
iPad users had paid for 39% of apps, declining to 22% for users of other
slates.
Data from the US and UK showed 67% of the tablet audience
surf the web via this route, with 55% sending email and instant messages, 31%
reading ebooks, 33% social networking and 17% playing games.
Looking forward, the number of people expecting to log on to
social networks in this way fell to 29%, with gaming also sliding to 14%, but
both pastimes are likely to see rising interest.
Elsewhere, the study reported that laptop ownership rates
had climbed from 62% to 81% since November 2010, figures hitting 28% and 59%
respectively for smartphones.
Data sourced from PC Mag, Barron's, AllThingsD; additional
content b Warc staff
No comments:
Post a Comment