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Despite India's overall healthy growth in the smartphone market -- currently sitting as the third largest behind China and the United States -- Apple is having a tough time gaining ground in the country. According to a new report from Strategy Analytics, Apple saw a drastic percentage dip in iPhone users from 2015 to 2016, with 35 percent fewer iPhone devices sold this year. Earlier in May, Apple CEO Tim Cook admitted iPhones are too expensive in India, potentially harming the company's sales figures as it tries to grow.

In its new report, the market research firm said that Apple sold just 800,000 handsets in Q2 2016, while in the same year-ago quarter the company sold 1.2 million units. These deflating sales numbers rippled into Apple's operating system marketshare in India, essentially getting halved down from 4.5 percent in Q2 2015 to 2.4 percent in Q2 2016. Director of Strategy Analytics, Woody Oh, pointed out a few ways Apple might go about course correcting its current struggles in the country, including the ongoing saga of boosting its retail presence in India.

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"Apple iOS fell 35 percent annually and shipped 0.8 million smartphones in India in Q2 2016. Apple's smartphone marketshare has halved from 4 percent to just 2 percent in India during the past year. Apple iOS will need to reduce iPhone pricing to cheaper levels, attract more operator subsidies and enlarge its retail presence through Apple stores or online channels if it wants to regrow significantly in the future."
Apple Stores aren't as ubiquitous in India as they are in other parts of the world thanks to the country's rules on foreign direct investments, which required 30 percent of goods sold by a foreign company to be manufactured or produced within India. Thankfully, after a ruling in June cleared the way for companies to circumvent that law, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi set a precedent by granting Apple a three-year extension on the strict local-sourcing rule, due to its single-brand retail company status selling "cutting-edge technology." Companies similar to Apple are expected to get similar treatment.

While the relaxation of these rules should help Apple moving forward, it doesn't change the fact that Android remained the dominant force in India this year. In total, 29.8 million Android smartphones shipped within the country in Q2 2016, growing from 23.2 million in the same quarter last year. Similarly, Google's Android operating system remained the dominant force in the Indian mobile market with a record 97 percent hold for the quarter, increasing from 90 percent a year ago.

Apple's retail future in the country might be turning around, but the company is still hitting smaller roadblocks on its route to increasing sales figures in India. In May, Commerce and Industry Minister Nirmala Sitharaman ruled "not in favor" of a proposal laid out by Apple to sell used iPhones in the country. Thanks to Apple's repeated growth frustrations, Strategy Analytics said that Android's domination of the Indian smartphone market "looks unbeatable right now, due to its deep portfolio of hardware partners, extensive distribution channels, and a wide range of low-cost apps like Gmail."

Article Link: Apple Continues to Struggle in India as iPhone Sales Drop 35 Percent in 2016
 
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India has many issues, starting with corruption and a protectionist attitude that impacts Apple. However, to me it is still a better long term play versus China which seems to change its mind daily and whose court systems are... well, I won't say. Apple needs to figure out how to migrate manufacturing to India and open that market up. Tim needs to be less dependent on China. Create a cheaper phone that gets folks into the ecosystem for example. Figure out what manufacturing can me moved to india and invest there. This will warm the government and the people to Apple.
 
A report based on nothingness from Strategy never-gets-it-right-but-gets-reported-anyway Analytics...
 
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Nobody believes Strategy Analytics. EVERY time they produce a report (since the iPhone was introduced), they downplay Apple sales and introduce "other" categories with the intent of mathematically elevating competitor percentages. They are paid by investment firms who buy their expensive reports, the same ones with "shorts" on Apple stock
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Not Surprised. Apple no longer innovates... i'm a long time apple user but damn...of late Apple is really just so disappointing with their products and practices
That literally has nothing to do with India being a poor country. Also, they innovate more often than any other tech company.
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don't know about india, but apple obviously can't give us something new. I just can't wait to skip iPhone 7...
That will be many new things... new design, new internals, new iOS. Just because it may look "similar" (note, not the same), doesn't mean it isn't new
 
India is incredibly price conscious; Apple doesn't sell cheap phones. No surprise here.

I agree with your statement. The year on year drop, however, has to be troubling. The price conscious nature of that market is a constant that the sales trendline has dipped below. It's too big a market to ignore yet, at the moment, the only solution appears to be a pricing adjustment.
As more of the planet moves away from carrier subsidized devices, it will be interesting to see how it affects iPhone sales and whether there will be an inevitable acceptance that margins may need to be revisited. The shareholders will be watching this closely.
 
Not Surprised. Apple no longer innovates... i'm a long time apple user but damn...of late Apple is really just so disappointing with their products and practices

What about 3D Touch last year? Apple Watch last year?

They can't constantly innovate to please everyone...this stuff takes time
 
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Too pricey apple and the poor country India seems no combination so nothing surprise. The prices of their iPhone are dangerously expensive in India,a common man in India can't even imagine of getting a iPhone :mad: the cheap Chinese company's(example-lava,gionee,micromax,Samsung,xiaomi,oppo,Nokia and some more) had made a big market in India by providing a much much cheaper phones that do things that a iPhone can't (example Bluetooth sharing,direct download from browser) much of the generation lives in poverty and about 90% of population can't even tell a difference between a premium iPhone and fake chines iPhone clone. And if they really want to gain market share in India they have to drop the price of iPhones as low as a cheap Chinese android phones and that's not going to happen any time soon
yeah that's the reality and apple is still far far away from India

http://m.indiatoday.in/story/india-rural-household-650-millions-live-on-rs-33-per-day/1/451076.html
So a man who earns rs 5000 a month and about rs 60000 per year how can he buy a iPhone that costs rs 62000 :eek:
 
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Or maybe... don't try to sell to the masses right now... remain an elitist, aspirational brand... and patiently wait until the upper middle class rises in India, as it did in China a few years ago. And when 100m of those have bought an iPhone, only then, target mass market with more price-conscious - but never cheap - smartphones. Let local Indian brands, Chinese brands and even Samsung fight to death with razor slim margins on copycat Android smartphones, wait until the local brands die for lack of funding, and come back in 5 years...

I mean you can't be selling $18k gold watches somewhere and be the #1 brand of telephones in India. Trying to achieve that would be a total lack of focus.
 
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