Apple iPhone, Droid, Nexus One After 74 Days: Report
The Motorola Droid is increasingly looking like a solid competitor
for the Apple iPhone, while the Nexus One may be chalked up as an
expensive lesson on the Google learning curve.
A March 16 report from analytics firm Flurry takes a look at each
device's first 74 days - the amount of time it took for Apple to sell 1
million of its first iPhone 1G handsets. According to the report, 74
days in, Google had only sold approximately 135,000 Nexus One handsets,
while Verizon Wireless moved an impressive 1.05 million Motorola Droids.
"The comparison is interesting because the iPhone and Nexus One each
represent Apple and Google's first fully branded handsets,
respectively," Flurry's Peter Farago wrote in a post on the Flurry blog. "We add the Motorola Droid as a point of comparison, and because it's the fastest-selling Android phone to date."
Describing the Nexus One as the "most advanced Android handset to
date," Flurry points to reasons of marketing, pricing and distribution
to explain the sales discrepancy between the two Android-running
devices. In a Jan. 13 report, the firm went into more detail, explaining that the Nexus One was released Jan 5 - post holiday sales - while the Droid's Nov. 5 launch date more perfectly positioned it to benefit from consumer dollars.
Additionally, while Verizon spent a reported $100 million on marketing,
Google marketed and sold the Nexus One through its Website.
In the current report, Flurry offers a rationale, instead, for the
Droid's success, which it also tempers in regard to the iPhone,
explaining that 2007 iPhone sales and 2009 Droid sales are hardly
apples-to-apples.
"When the iPhone launched, consumers' concept of a mobile computing
device as we now understand it, was very different," Farago wrote.
"Since then, Apple has spent million of dollars training and educating
consumers about capabilities of such a device, which was no small feat
especially after its first foray into the handset business."
Also driving the Droid's success, said Flurry, was the subscriber base
of the devices' networks. While AT&T was 63.7 million subscribers
strong at the time of the iPhone's 2007 launch, Verizon had a potential
89 million Droid subscribers at the end of the third quarter of 2009.
Still, Flurry points out that the ability for the Droid and similar
device to provide true, on-going competition for the iPhone will depend
on whether the Android developer community rallies behind the cause.
Ultimately, wrote Farago, "developers support hardware with the largest
installed base first. For Android to make progress faster, from a sales
perspective, it needs more Droids and fewer Nexus Ones going forward."
