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Single-Use MP3 Players Decline |
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Written by Adam Gosling
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Tuesday, 01 May 2007 |
The iPod may still be making headlines, but music capable mobile phones
are putting pressure on single use compressed music devices as Apple
itself shifts consumer perception toward music phones, says IDC.
Music phones, cellular phones capable of playing compressed music files such as MP3s, will become increasingly attractive to
the mass consumer market with handsets being subsidized by the mobile
operators, predicts industry research outfit, IDC Australia.
By 2011, IDC predicts that music phones will reach a
penetration of 84% amongst mobile users.
"Handset vendors, most notably Sony Ericsson, have well-positioned
sub-brands that target a music-centric audience and are investing
heavily into this area. At the same time, mobile operators are urging
mobile users towards embracing their 3G content portals and music
services to minimise subscriber churn and to increase average revenue
per user, thus further escalating the marketing push behind music
phones," said Jerson Yau, Research Analyst for Mobility & Wireless
Research, IDC Australia.
In the face of this growth sales of regular portable MP3 players is
beginning to slow down. There is no doubt that portable MP3 players
were adopted at record speed, notes the researcher, but as the MP3
player market reaches saturation and faces heated competition from
alternative devices, IDC expects market growth to slow considerably.
The research findings are contained in a study, titled "In My Place:
Australia Portable Compressed Audio (MP3) Player 2007-2011 Forecast and
Analysis." The report focuses on the Australian market and contrasts
the market potential of single user MP3 players like the iPod against
the market for music phones. The study also provides market sizing and
forecast of unit shipments, revenue, and average selling prices for
portable MP3 players for the 2006-2011 forecast period.
IDC argues that while Apple has maintained its dominance on both the
device and service fronts of the portable music market with its iPod
brand players and iTunes music download store, the announcement of the
iPhone in January will begin to shift consumer mindshare from
standalone MP3 players towards music phones.
Apple's acceptance of the music phone will help to educate mainstream
consumers to consider mobile phones as viable options, says IDC. This
will impact the growth of the standalone MP3 player market especially
at a time when the market relies on replacement purchases.
IDCs study finds that music capabilities on phones have already reached
mainstream. Whether or not consumers are using phones to substitute
standalone MP3 players is a different question, there is no doubt that
handset vendors are ready to position music phones as viable
substitutes for standalone MP3 players, says the researcher.
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