Apple iPad Price Still a Concern
The Apple iPad has no shortage of people who are aware of it, says NPD Group; the problem is finding people willing to pony up more than $500 to buy the mobile device. Only 9 percent of those surveyed said they were ready to buy an iPad in the next six months.
With a week to wait until the iPad's much-hyped arrival, a major question on
analysts' lips is, Who will buy Apple's newest darling?
According to a March 26 report from NPD Group, the most likely iPad buyers are
current Apple product owners and 18- to 34-year-olds.
The lure for the first group, said the report, lies in the Apple name, with 37
percent of those surveyed citing "liking the Apple brand" as a top
reason for their interest in the iPad.
The iPad's multitouch screen garnered an equal percentage of interest from the
18- to 34-year-olds, a group NPD said is most likely to use the iPad for
accessing the Internet and listening to music.
"Considering what people are planning to use the iPad for, it's not hard
to understand why people who have these capabilities on other devices, such as
the iPod Touch or a notebook [or] netbook, may not want to spend $500 or more
on a similar device," NPD analyst Stephen Baker said in a statement.
"This points to the need for Apple to close the content deals that focus
the iPad on what is likely to be its best long-range value proposition around
high-quality media consumption," Baker went on, alluding to the publishing
contracts that Apple is said to be still working to secure. Conde Nast and
the Associated Press, however, have already committed
to creating content for the iPad.
Apple recently began offering
iPhones without an AT&T contract and hence unsubsidized by the carrier.
The unsubsidized smartphones' pricing, which ranges from $499 to $699, may be
enough to temporarily prevent one from flinching at the iPad's price range of
$499 to $829.
Or not. NPD found pricing, even among Apple product owners, to be a major
issue, with 43 percent of respondents saying they found the iPad too expensive.
Among 18- to 34-year-olds, 57 percent cited price as the No. 1 reason they
weren't ready to head to the Apple store April 3-or any time soon.
Indeed, when asked how likely they were to purchase an iPad over the next six
months, only 9 percent of all consumers NPD surveyed said they were
"extremely or very likely" to. Only 10 percent of 18- to 34-year-olds
and 9 percent of Apple product owners said the same.
Conversely, 66 percent of consumers didn't see one in their future, and neither
did 60 percent of Apple product owners.
In a March 22 report, ComScore
gave Apple slightly better odds, finding that 15 percent of respondents
intended to buy an iPad over the next three months.
Additionally, Broadpoint AmTech analyst Brian Marshall wrote in a March 9
research note that getting
two hands on the iPad may be enough to change some minds.
"We note the vast majority of the naysayers have not yet had the
opportunity to use the iPad on a firsthand basis ... We were hooked after the
first 15 minutes of use," Marshall
wrote.
He went on to predict that, should the iPad "live up to its
potential," Apple could ship nearly 7 million iPads before the year's end.








