Equal
monthly installments and cash back schemes have worked wonders for
Apple in India as iPhone's monthly sales have risen by 300% to 400% over
the last few months. The Cupertino-based company has managed to
dramatically push up its sales by figuring out trends of consumer demand
and changing the iPhone's perception from being a high-end product to
an affordable one.
Compared to average monthly
sales of 70,000-80,000 smartphones before the EMI schemes were offered
to consumers in India iPhone sales have zoomed up to stratospheric
levels, analysts at Credit Suisse said. "From our channel checks we
believe that iPhone sales are nearing 400,000 units per month in India -
that is nearly 3% share of handset sales for a single top-end product
in a market that has long been dominated by low-end feature phones,"
Credit Suisse's research analyst Sunil Tirumalai said in a note to
clients that was accessed by ET.
Apple does not
reveal its sales figures for a particular market. The company did not
comment on the sales figures quoted by the agency.
About
four months ago, Apple began its EMI scheme that offered potential
buyers to make a partial payment of iPhone 4 and 4S models upfront and
pay the rest of the amount in installments over 6 to 12 months without
paying any interest. The super aggressive pricing and advertising
blitzkrieg on the iPhone 4 and iPhone 4S older models that are not sold
in any other country, created a strong foothold for iPhone as a product
in India.
"The 4-9% implicit discount coupled
with the option of easy EMIs spread over 6-12 months became popular.
Within a few months, our discussions with handset retailers indicated
that iPhone sales went up 3-4x, forcing companies to respond," Tirumalai
added.
The Swiss brokerage firm and research
agency said its estimates were based on checks with mobile store
retailers across the country and from distributors mandated to sell
Apple products. In September last year, Apple changed its retail
strategy from partnering with telecom operators in India (Bharti Airtel
and Aircel as its preferred partners), and brought on board Redington
and Ingram Micro as official distributors for its handsets. IDC's
Asia-Pacific Mobile Phone Tracker for October-December 2012 revealed
that Apple increased its value share in the smartphone market rapidly to
15.6% from 3.9% in the previous quarter while its share in shipments
rose to 4.7% from 1.3% in the same time.
Korean
smartphone maker Samsung that led with 38.8% share in value and 33.2%
share in volumes in the fourth quarter offered more number of models to
consumers on EMI schemes. Galaxy Note II almost matched the EMI payment
of iPhone 5 as it sold for 12 EMIs of Rs 2,999 each compared to a down
payment of Rs 16,990 for the iPhone 5 followed by EMIs of Rs 2,376 for
every month in a year.
By April, Apple pushed
the pedal harder by offering an 18% cash discount on top of the earlier
iPhone 4 offer, thus nearly taking away the down-payment. This resulted
in an effective 23-27% discount on the product which made it an
affordable option for new smartphone buyers rather than a premium
product. This time, apart from Samsung that began selling its flagship
S4 on monthly installments, other rivals like Nokia and BlackBerry also
joined the race.
However, in the smartphone
price wars, telecom operators ended up with most benefits as larger
smartphone sales resulted in higher data usage and thus, higher data
revenue. The number of data subscribers for Bharti rose to 43.4 million
in the fourth quarter ended March 31, 2013 from 41.4 million in the
three months ended December 2012. The country's largest mobile phone
company's average revenue per user (Arpu), an indicator of
profitability, rose by 16% in a quarter - from Rs 47 in December 2012 to
Rs 55 in March 2013. Idea Cellular's blended data Arpu (2G and 3G) was
Rs 55 for the three months ended March 2013, up by Rs 3 over the
previous quarter. Data ARPU for 3G subscriber babase had risen to Rs 105
against from Rs 97 in the same period while each 3G subscriber was
using an average of 608 MB Megabyte. The number of customers taking up
3G plans from Bharti Airtel has also risen by 23% in the same period,
indicating rising demand for high-speed data services as more and more
consumers shift to smartphones.
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