iPhone, Android Users Loyal, BlackBerry Users Straying: Report
Apple iPhone and Google Android OS smartphone users are a smitten bunch, but
owners of Research In Motion BlackBerry
devices have a wandering eye for other smartphones, a March 15 brand loyalty
survey from market research firm Crowd Science revealed.
The survey, which included 1,100-plus respondents, found an overall curiosity
regarding the Android OS and a "restlessness" among BlackBerry users.
Nearly 40 percent of BlackBerry users said they'd like to make the Apple iPhone
their next smartphone purchase, and when asked if they'd swap their present
phone for the Android-based Google Nexus One, 32 percent of BlackBerry users
said yes, compared with 9 percent of iPhone users.
Among users with smartphones not made by RIM or Apple, 60 percent said they'd
swap for the Nexus One.
"These results show that the restlessness of BlackBerry users with their
current brand hasn't just been driven by the allure of iPhone," said John
Martin, CEO of Crowd Science. "Rather,
BlackBerry as a brand just isn't garnering the loyalty seen with other mobile
operating systems."
In keeping with said loyalty, 97 percent of iPhone users surveyed would
recommend the iPhone to others. When asked about Android, 17 percent said
they'd recommend it to others, and regarding "other smartphones," 18 percent
said the same.
When Android users were posed the same questions, 100 percent said they'd
recommend an Android device. Regarding the iPhone, 41 percent would recommend
it, and 36 percent were positive toward other smartphones. Among BlackBerry
users, however, only 64 percent said they'd recommend non-iPhone and Android
models, while 52 percent would recommend the iPhone and 28 percent would
recommend an Android phone.
Google
introduced the Nexus One Jan. 5, nearly midway through the survey's span
from Dec. 24, 2009,
through Jan. 21. Rather than disrupt the results, Crowd Science said in a
statement, it was able to measure the changing attitudes of respondents.
Following the launch, awareness of the Android OS was said to be 91 percent
among iPhone users, 75 percent among BlackBerry users and 73 percent among
users of other smartphones.
As
AdMob similarly related in a late-February report, Crowd Science found
Android users, on average, to be younger than iPhone or BlackBerry users, with
29 percent of users falling between 18 and 24 years of age, compared with 11
percent of BlackBerry and 15 percent of iPhone users.
Android users additionally had lower incomes than iPhone or BlackBerry users,
while BlackBerry users had the highest incomes of the three.
BlackBerry users, hitting on the device's strength, also use their device more
for business than the other phone owners-while the percentage of BlackBerry,
iPhone and Android users who said they used their smartphones for both business
and personal use was nearly identical, 7 percent of BlackBerry users said they
used their device strictly for business purposes, while only 1 percent of
iPhone users and even fewer, if any, Android users said the same.
The most unusual, and perhaps contestable, finding in the survey, however, may
be regarding gender. While it's been reported that Android
users are predominantly male, the Crowd Science survey found the same to be
even truer of iPhone users. Among iPhone survey respondents, 88 percent were
male and 12 percent female-bucking
the earlier AdMob results, which found iPhone users to be more or less equally
split between the sexes.
The Android users surveyed were 84 percent male and 16 percent female, and
BlackBerry users were 82 percent male, 18 percent female.
Women were most strongly represented in the "other smartphone" category,
representing 25 percent of those surveyed, while men made up 75 percent of the
group.
Crowd Science reports that
respondents were randomly recruited from "Websites serving more than 20 million
unique visitors."
