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Apple Needs to Hustle with Tablet, Charge $600, Says Study
By: Michelle Maisto
2009-11-01
Article Rating:    / 7
There are 2 user comments on this Mobile & Wireless story.
With rumors of an Apple tablet reinvigorated, shopping site Retrevo released the findings of an Apple tablet study that found $600 to be the pricing sweet spot and the need for Apple to get a move on before more Mac users buy netbooks.Just in case Apple does produce a tablet/slate product, consumer electronics
shopping site Retrevo decided to poll its users to find out who would buy one
and for what price.
News of an Apple tabletthe computer makers supposed one-upping of the netbook
marketbegan in May, when Gene
Munster, an analyst with Piper Jaffray, wrote in a research note: We expect
Apple to fill the gap between the iPod Touch and the MacBook with a new tablet
device (not a netbook) priced at about $500 to $700.
On Oct. 26, the rumor gained new ground when Bill Keller, executive editor at
The New York Times, casually referred to an Apple slate during a talk at the
TheTimesCenter, the newspapers new lectures-and-more space.
"I'm
hoping we can get the newsroom more actively involved in the challenge of
delivering our best journalism in the form of Times Reader, iPhone apps, WAP or
the impending Apple slate, or whatever comes after that, Keller told the
crowd, according to the Nieman Foundation for Journalism at Harvard University,
which posted the comment on its Website.
Avi Greengart, an analyst with Current Analysis, told eWEEK on Oct. 26, I have
been promised an Apple tablet every few months since the company actually
stopped building one [the Newton].
I have no doubt that Apple has tablet projects in its labs.
Neil Mawston, a London-based analyst with Strategy Analytics, additionally told
eWEEK, Apple is clearly hitting a rich vein of sales with its touch-screen
products, so it makes good sense to expand the technology to as many subcategories
as possible. Apple has already enabled its small-screen device portfolio such
as the iPod and iPhone with touch screens, so it feels inevitable the
technology will eventually be stretched to bigger-screen categories like MIDs,
e-books, netbooks or laptops.
Mawston continued, I don't have any inside information at this stage, but I
would be surprised if Apple did not launch a tabletlike touch device of some
description next year, with pricing likely to be set at a premium level for
affluent technophiles.
Retrevo
recommends keeping the pricing at around the $600 mark. In its survey of 753
mostly U.S. customers, Retrevo found that 68 percent of Mac owners said they are
willing to pay more than $600 for an Apple tablet, while only 36 percent of PC
owners are willing to cross the $600 mark.
Among Mac users, 27 percent said theyd pay between $600 and $800, while only
16 percent of PC users said the same. And upward of $800? Retrevo found 41
percent of Mac users still on board, while only 20 percent of PC users were
game.
Retrevo also encourages Apple to get a move on. It reports that 59 percent of
the iPhone owners who responded to the survey [say] they already own or plan to
buy a netbook this year.
In conclusion, If Apple wants to grab a larger market and get in on the
netbook craze, it will need to attract PC owners to generate significant
sales, Retrevo wrote in a statement on its findings.
To convert PC owners to Apple owners, Apple needs to consider a [close to]
$600 price point for the tablet, and they should not delay bringing it to
market.
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