Notebook PC Market Passes 38 Million Units, Driven by Netbooks
Tier-1 brands such as Acer, HP, Dell, Lenovo and Toshiba have been aggressive in the netbook market, which helped the total notebook PC market to post strong quarter-to-quarter and year-to-year growth, says a new report from DisplaySearch.
The total notebook PC market performed well in the second quarter of 2009, with unit numbers passing 38 million and mini-notebook PCs, or netbooks, significantly contributing to those results, states an Aug. 31 report from DisplaySearch.
The netbook market grew 40 percent quarter to quarter, with its share
of total portable computer shipments rising from 17.8 percent in the
first quarter of the year to 22.2 percent in the second quarter.
Display Search notes that Asus, which offered one of the first netbook
models, is losing market share to bigger name brands such as Acer,
Hewlett-Packard, Dell, Lenovo and Toshiba, which have all begun
offering the low-cost netbooks. The netbooks have been a saving grace
during the global recession, continuing to post positive numbers as
overall PC shipments fell.
Even mobile phone maker Nokia announced recently that it would enter the netbook market, with the Intel-based Nokia Booklet 3G.
Notebook PCs, which accounted for 82.2 percent of portable computer
shipments in the first quarter of the year, dipped to 77.8 percent in
the second.
The netbooks' low price points have been said to be "cannibalizing"
notebook sales, and some have worried that consumers will use the
netbooks as primary computers - instead of as secondary computers for
travel and convenience, as manufacturers intended - particularly as the
netbooks' screen sizes have increased.
"Mini-note PC screen sizes have increased steadily, from 7 inches to
8.9 inches and then to 10.2 inches. Some panel makers and brands are
promoting 11.6-inch mini-note displays, leading to an overalap with
ultraportable notebooks," said John F. Jacobs, DisplaySearch director
of notebook market research, in a statement.
"However, the higher prices of these larger netbooks diminish their
cost advantage," Jacobs added. "In addition to many other key players
in the supply chain, Microsoft indicated it is their desire to increase
the [average selling price] of mini-notes. A significant increase to
the ASP of mini-notes may deter consumers that are predominantly using
min-notes as secondary PCs."
DisplaySearch reports that netbook growth is higher than notebook PC
penetration in Latin America and Greater China, where first-time PC
users aren't likely to need the full feature sets of a notebook. Latin
America accounted for 6.7 percent of netbook shipments in the quarter,
versus 4.8 percent of notebook PCs, while China took 18.6 percent of
netbooks and 13.8 percent of notebook PCs.
The largest percentage of netbooks, 32.9 percent, went to EMEA -
Europe, Middle East and Africa - where telecoms and cable providers
have been offering subsidized pricing for netbooks along with service
contracts, a strategy that has proved "quite successful," according to
DisplaySearch.
North America received 26.6 percent of netbook shipments and 30.2 percent of notebook PCs. And while U.S. carriers, such as AT&T and Verizon, and high-speed Internet providers such as Qwest,
are offering similar netbook enticements, DisplaySearch notes in the
statement that "these promotions were only test marketed in [the second
quarter of 2009], so there is insufficient data to determine if they
will achieve the same measure of success."









