Around
half of all U.S. households own at least one Apple product, whether it’s an
iPad, iPod or Mac, according to a CNBC
survey. It’s estimated that some 55 million homes have at least one Apple
gadget, and one in 10 of the non-Apple households plans to purchase a
fruit-branded product in the next year. The results on Apple’s penetration in
U.S. homes are hardly surprising. The company’s stock recently rose above $600
per share to reach record highs,
as over the past decade the company’s profits went from $65 million to $33
billion. At the same time, Apple has sold tens of millions of iPods, iPhones
and iPads, dominating almost every market it has entered (besides PCs, of
course). The survey shows the main buyers of Apple gear tend to be male,
college-educated, younger and richer: 77 percent of those earning more than
$75,000 a year own at least one Apple product, compared with 28 percent of
those making less than $30,000 per year. Age is not a barrier though: 63
percent of respondents between 18 and 34 as well as those between 35 to 49
called themselves Apple users, but the percentage goes down to 50 when you look
at those aged 50 to 64.
The biggest legion of Apple fans reside in the West,
where 57 percent of homes own around two Apple products, compared with 47
percent on average in the rest of the country. People own the least Apple
devices in the South, the survey found. Also, regardless of political inclinations,
around 56 percent of both Republicans and Democrats own at least one device
with the fruit logo on it. The survey however, does not say which devices the
households own, as Macs, iPads, iPods and iPhones are lumped together. The
number of people polled in the survey is also relatively low -- 836 Americans,
and the survey lacks context such as comparison figures with ownership of PCs
or Android devices. It had a margin of error of plus or minus 3.4 percentage
points.
No comments:
Post a Comment