Slashdot Mirror


Why the iPod is Losing its Cool

An anonymous reader writes "The Guardian Unlimited has a provocative article on the recent decline in iPod sales: 'Analysts warn that the iPod has passed its peak. From its launch five years ago its sales graph showed a consistent upward curve, culminating in a period around last Christmas that saw a record 14 million sold. But sales fell to 8.5 million in the following quarter, and down to 8.1 million in the most recent three-month period. Wall Street is reportedly starting to worry that the bubble will burst.'"

2 of 563 comments (clear)

  1. According to MacDailyNews.com... by jcr · · Score: 5, Informative

    Q4 03: 336,000
      Q1 04: 733,000 (holiday quarter)
      Q2 04: 807,000
      Q3 04: 860,000
      Q4 04: 2,016,000
      Q1 05: 4,580,000 (holiday quarter)
      Q2 05: 5,311,000
      Q3 05: 6,155,000
      Q4 05: 6,451,000
      Q1 06: 14,043,000 (holiday quarter)
      Q2 06: 8,526,000
      Q3 06: 8,111,000

    We have yet to see a year-over-year decline in sales. It is of course to be expected, that pundits seeking attention will continue to troll with "the sky is falling" articles, just like we'll keep hearing about how every also-ran is an "iPod killer".

    -jcr

    --
    The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
  2. "Fad" not a poorly chosen word, iPod = fashion by AHumbleOpinion · · Score: 5, Informative

    I'm sure the Apple faithful (*) will violently disagree, but the parent's use of the word "fad" is not poorly chosen. Recently local MBA students (**) in a marketing class surveyed hundreds of kids in local high schools regard digital music players. Stress "digital music players", they did not ask about iPod, they did not lead the respondents(***). The kids were pretty well informed, there was a lot of comparing and contrasting of various players at school. iPods were the most popular device, no surprise there, but there was a surprise. The most popular reason for choosing the iPod over competitors was fashion, a status symbol. It was not ease of use, although ease of use was identified as a category iPod wins in. For technology and features Creative was the winner, the lack of radio was a negative for the iPod.

    The team that did the survey and focus groups was very quick to point out that this was just a class project, small scale and localized. However it was similar to a pilot program that found interesting results and could be used to justify a larger national study.

    (*) I own an iPod, I love it, I would buy another. I own PCs and Macs and use iTunes on both platforms. However I am not religious about music players or operating systems.

    (**) Working professionals who have real jobs in industry, under the supervision of a marketing professor who does this sort of thing for rather large firms. This was a class project, not a consulting project.

    (***) I was not involved in the project but did I sit in on the presentation of the results. My recollection is that the questions went something like:
    Do you own a digital music player?
    What models did you consider?
    What model did you purchase?
    Why did you purchase that model?
    etc.