Mobile Device Shipments to Nearly Double By 2014
Shipments of mobile, wireless devices, including smartphones, netbooks, consumer electronics and cellular modems, are expected to nearly double by 2014, according to ABI Research. With growth, however, will come increased competition and a need for stronger use cases.
Mobile device shipments are expected to nearly double by the end of
2014, according to a Dec. 21 report from ABI Research. Such growth,
however, will increase competition and lead to a need for devices to
better set themselves apart, said the firm.
In 2009, a total of 1.2 billion mobile devices with wireless
capabilities - including mobile handsets, mobile Internet devices
(MIDs), consumer electrons, cellular modems and netbooks - are expected
to ship. Come 2014, ABI expects shipments of such devices to reach 2.25
billion units, with consumer favorite shifting to new categories.
"The next five years will see a shift in the breakdown between types of
mobile devices shipped," said Michael Morgan, an analyst with ABI, in a
statement.
"Today, wireless handsets rule the roost, with other mobile devices
accounting for only 40 million shipments and cellular modems only 60
million," Morgan continued. "While handset shipments did actually
decrease between 2008 and 2009 due to the global recession, the other
two segments in fact grew very aggressively."
Strategy
Analytics, in an Oct. 30 report on third-quarter global mobile handset
shipments, showed the worldwide handset market to have fallen by an
average of 11 percent over the previous quarters. The third
quarter, however, was down only 4 percent from a year earlier, and the
firm pointed to positive growth in the fourth quarter.
ABI's Morgan continued, "Handset sales are growing at only 4 percent,
while cellular modem shipments are expected to grow by 40 percent
annually, and ultra mobile devices by 67 percent. These newer categories represent very attractive market opportunities and new revenue streams for operators."
The new categories will additionally create new competition for
smartphones, said Morgan, as consumers make purchasing choices.
Consequently, handset vendors will need to make low-cost and
ultra-low-cost models a larger part of their businesses, while MID and
netbook makers will need to better define their use cases and value
propositions.
"The convergence period for cellular communications is coming to an
end, and now we're entering a period of divergence. For many devices
the technology is already in place, it's just the business and billing
models that need to be built," said Morgan.
Also anticipating mobile device growth, investment
bank Morgan Stanley expects that within five years, more people will
access the Internet via mobile devices than desktop PCs. In a Dec.
15 report, it described social networking, 3G network adoption, video,
voice-over IP and "impressive mobile devices" as major contributors to
the growth of mobile Internet use.









