Thursday 29 November 2012

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Windows 8 Impact on Tablet, PC Sales Minimal: NPD

Microsoft’s long-awaited operating system Windows 8 is not having a massive impact on PC and tablet sales, the NPD Group found.


 Excluding sales of Microsoft’s much buzzed about Surface tablet, the consumer Windows PC and tablet market didn’t get the boost it needed from the launch of Microsoft’s Windows 8 in the U.S, according to a report from IT industry analyst The NPD Group.

Since the Windows 8 launch on October 26, Windows device sales have fallen 21 percent versus the same period last year, according to NPD Group’s Weekly Tracking Service, comprised a subset panel of retailers. However, average selling prices (ASP) of Windows computing devices have jumped significantly this year. This year’s ASP over the past four weeks rose to $477 from last year’s overall ASP of $433.

The report also found notebooks, which have been weak throughout most of 2012, saw that trend continue, falling nearly a quarter (24 percent compared with the same period last year. However, desktop sales have fared better this year, dropping just 9 percent. Windows 8 tablet sales have been almost non-existent, with unit sales representing less than one percent of all Windows 8 device sales to date, according to the report.
Windows 8 notebooks have seen a nearly $80 rise in selling prices versus the prior year, propelled  by the aforementioned strong performance of touchscreen devices and a solid uptick in the pricing on mainstream notebooks. Windows 8 desktop ASPs were also strong with selling prices up nearly 10 percent, driven by the same factors as notebook sales, the report revealed.

“After just four weeks on the market, it’s still early to place blame on Windows 8 for the ongoing weakness in the PC market,” NPD Group’s vice president of industry analysis Stephen Baker said.  “We still have the whole holiday selling season ahead of us, but clearly Windows 8 did not prove to be the impetus for a sales turnaround some had hoped for.”

Since its launch, Windows 8, the latest version of Microsoft’s ubiquitous operating system, has captured a little more than half (58 percent) of Windows computing device unit sales, compared to the 83 percent Windows 7 accounted for four weeks after that launch.



 “The bad Back-to-School period left a lot of inventory in the channel, which had a real impact on the initial sell-through rates for Windows 8,” Baker said. “The strong performance of Windows 8 notebooks with touchscreens, where Windows 8 truly shines, offers some reason for optimism.  These products accounted for 6 percent of Windows 8 notebook sales at an average price of $867 helping to re-establish a premium segment to the Windows consumer notebook market.”

The report follows a proclamation on Nov. 28 by bombastic Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer, who said that the company sold 40 million licenses for the new operating system in its first month of availability. However, Ballmer, speaking at Microsoft’s annual shareholders meeting, didn’t clarify whether the licenses were sold to original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) or to consumers who bought the OS or a new Windows 8 computer.

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