It was pretty much inevitable, but now it’s been confirmed: smartphones are officially out-shipping feature phones in Europe.
Feature phones fade, smartphones surge
A new report by IDC shows feature phone shipments slumping by 29 per cent in the second quarter of this year, notching up a total of 20.4 million units.
Over the same quarter, smartphone shipments increased 48% per cent to 21.8 million units from a year ago.
However, the report notes that the overall Western European mobile phone market has declined by 3 per cent year on year to 42.2 million units in the quarter, with the poor economic climate and Nokia’s fall from grace being cited as contributing factors.
This quarter was particularly important from the device type perspective,” said Francisco Jeronimo, European mobile devices research manager, IDC, who added:
Smartphones now dominate the Western European phone market and those vendors with stronger portfolios in the segment are consolidating their positions, compared with those manufacturers with less attractive smart devices. Android-powered handsets from the likes of Samsung, HTC, and Sony Ericsson have been able to drive strong volumes and to grab the biggest slice of share from the declining Symbian as Nokia moves to Windows Phones.
Android continues to rule Europe, registering a staggering 352 percent year-to-year increase in shipments, while Samsung remains the #1 manufacturer, bagging 33 percent of the European market.
Here’s the press release:
Smartphones Outstrip Feature Phones for First Time in Western Europe as Android Sees Strong Growth in 2Q11, Says IDC
09 Sep 2011
LONDON, September 9, 2011 – Western European feature phone shipments continued to decline sharply in 2Q11 as consumers increasingly move to smartphones, according to the latest European Mobile Phone Tracker from International Data Corporation (IDC). Feature phone shipments were down 29% to 20.4 million units in 2Q11, while smartphone shipments increased 48% to 21.8 million units from a year ago. The total Western European mobile phone market, however, declined 3% year on year to 42.2 million units in the quarter, according to IDC.This is the first time that smartphone shipments have surpassed feature phone shipments in Western Europe, representing 52% of total mobile phone shipments. All European countries are seeing increasing smartphone adoption, as consumers go for Android-based devices and the iPhone from Apple. On the other hand, mobile operators stopped subsidizing feature phones in Europe some time ago now, which has made the devices less attractive to users. Feature phones are becoming a niche segment driven by the very-low-end devices targeted at users who only need a device for voice and texts.
“This quarter was particularly important from the device type perspective,” said Francisco Jeronimo, European mobile devices research manager, IDC. “Smartphones now dominate the Western European phone market and those vendors with stronger portfolios in the segment are consolidating their positions, compared with those manufacturers with less attractive smart devices. Android-powered handsets from the likes of Samsung, HTC, and Sony Ericsson have been able to drive strong volumes and to grab the biggest slice of share from the declining Symbian as Nokia moves to Windows Phones.”
Jeronimo said, however, that the overall market had slipped into the red due to a number of factors: “First, the economic environment in the eurozone is deteriorating, with a direct impact on consumer demand. Secondly, the smartphone segment was strongly impacted by the sharp decline of Nokia, which was not totally offset by the remaining players, which may indicate that Symbian fans are holding off on their phone replacements until Nokia launches its Windows Phones. Lastly, operators focused on clearing inventories for the introduction of the new devices expected in the third quarter, such as the iPhone5 from Apple and Windows Phones from HTC and other players.”
Android OS strengthened its leadership in the region, with shipments up 352% year on year to 10.5 million units, which represented 48.5% of total smartphone shipments. Samsung was the most representative Android manufacturer, supported by the success of the Galaxy devices family.
I remember having the first really good smart phone way back when (2002 I think)..the Palm Treo 180 was a really impressive piece of kit…and there are some features that my iPhone 4 STILL doesn’t have – like a way to just download the subject line and sender of an email (when roaming abroad) rather than the whole email with attachments and images.
I had so many conversations with people saying “but why on earth would you WANT to get emails and the bbc news website on the train??”