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Q1 2011 Apple App Store Market Share Falls to 59 Percent

It appears that Apple’s App Store isn’t as popular as it used to be as for the past 2 years Apple’s App Store market share has fallen some 24 percent due to strong competition from competition from new application stores such as the Android Market and others Apple has lost part of its app domination.

However a stabilisation has appeared during the first quarter of 2011 as Apple managed to halt its down turn and increase market share to 59 percent a rise of 2 percent on the 57 percent of 2010, and is apparently due to Apple iPad users that are “heavy app users.”

According to statistics on Research2guidance, Apple iPad support for apps will continue to remain strong as long as other app stores are unsuccessful in coming up with a competitive app store alternative for tablet apps.

Apparently if Apple can over the next 2 years, slow down their loss of market share, it should be difficult for rivals to overtake Apple for quite some time as there are a couple of factors that affect the time that rivals can catch up.

Those factors are…smartphone penetration will hit 50 percent in most developed countries by the year 2014/15 and the more mass-market smartphones become the less likely a new user will add apps, and secondly the more cash spent on downloading apps it is less likely a user will switch platforms.

However assuming the Apple App Store market share drops the same as the last 2 years and rivals push Apple market share to hit a low of 40 percent by 2015, Apple will no doubt retain the “heavy downloaders” already on the iOS platform for quite a while.

Comments

2 thoughts on “Q1 2011 Apple App Store Market Share Falls to 59 Percent”

  1. hmm, well they falsified the number of app stores, and then falsified the number of sales in the none existent app stores… so making up a number of 59%? might be ok with you, but reality is far different,

    to prove the point, list out the 58 app stores that they believe exist, and i’ll show you a bunch of app stores that not only don’t exist, but don’t have the “downloads” that this report shows.

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