Gartner says smartphone sales grew 74% in Q2

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Gartner on Thursday issued its global mobile phone sales data for the second quarter, which shows that the industry grew 16.5% from the same quarter last year, to 428.7 million units. Smartphone sales jumped 74% year-on-year, with 107.7 million smartphones having been sold to end users around the world. “Smartphone sales continued to rise at the expense of feature phones,” said Roberta Cozza, principal research analyst at Gartner, in a statement. “Consumers in mature markets are choosing entry-level and midrange Android smartphones over feature phones, partly due to carriers’ and manufacturers’ promotions.” Android was the top smartphone operating system in the second quarter with a market share of 43.4% and unit sales totaling 46.78 million devices, and Symbian’s 23.85 million devices secured it a No. 2 position with 22.1% of the smartphone OS market. Apple’s iOS held 18.2% of the smartphone market last quarter, followed by RIM’s BlackBerry OS at 11.7%, Samsung’s Bada OS at 1.9% and Microsoft mobile platforms at 1.6%. Gartner also said Nokia was the world’s top smartphone vendor in the second quarter, though it did not provide data to support this claim in its press release, which follows below.

Gartner Says Sales of Mobile Devices in Second Quarter of 2011 Grew 16.5 Percent Year-on-Year; Smartphone Sales Grew 74 Percent

ZTE Became Fifth-Largest Mobile Phone Manufacturer and RIM Dropped to No. 6

Egham, UK, August 11, 2011—

Worldwide sales of mobile devices to end users totaled 428.7 million units in the second quarter of 2011, a 16.5 percent increase from the second quarter of 2010, according to Gartner, Inc. (see Table 1).

The channel built up stock at the end of the first quarter of 2011 in preparation of possible component shortages following the Japanese earthquake. As a result, sell-in demand slowed in the second quarter of 2011 to 421.1 million units, a 4.4 percent decrease from the previous quarter.

Sales of smartphones were up 74 percent year-on-year and accounted for 25 percent of overall sales in the second quarter of 2011, up from 17 percent in the second quarter of 2010.

“Smartphone sales continued to rise at the expense of feature phones,” said Roberta Cozza, principal research analyst at Gartner. “Consumers in mature markets are choosing entry-level and midrange Android smartphones over feature phones, partly due to carriers’ and manufacturers’ promotions.” However, replacement sales in Western Europe showed signs of fatigue as smartphone sales declined quarter-on-quarter.

Table 1
Worldwide Mobile Device Sales to End Users by Vendor in 2Q11 (Thousands of Units)

Vendor 2Q11

Units

2Q11 Market Share (%) 2Q10

Units

2Q10 Market Share (%)
Nokia 97,869.3 22.8 111,473.7 30.3
Samsung 69,827.6 16.3 65,328.2 17.8
LG 24,420.8 5.7 29,366.7 8.0
Apple 19,628.8 4.6 8,743.0 2.4
ZTE 13,070.2 3.0 6,730.6 1.8
Research In Motion 12,652.3 3.0 11,628.8 3.2
HTC 11,016.1 2.6 5,908.8 1.6
Motorola 10,221.4 2.4 9,109.4 2.5
Huawei Device 9,026.1 2.1 5,276.4 1.4
Sony Ericsson 7,266.5 1.7 11,008.5 3.0
Others 153,662.1 35.8 103,412.6 28.1
Total 428,661.2 100.0 367,986.7 100.0

Source: Gartner (August 2011)

In smartphones, Nokia’s sales into the channel in the second quarter of 2011 were low. This was partly due to a very competitive market that deflated demand for Symbian, but also to inventory management issues in Europe and China in particular. The channel bought less and worked hard to reduce stock levels, partly by cutting prices on older products. These factors reduced Nokia’s average selling price for smartphones, compared to the first quarter of 2011. “The sales efforts of the channel, combined with Nokia’s greater concentration in retail and distributors’ sales, saw Nokia destock more than 9 million units overall and 5 million smartphones, helping it hold on to its position as the leading smartphone manufacturer by volume,” said Ms. Cozza. “However, we will not see a repeat of this performance in the third quarter of 2011, as Nokia’s channel is pretty lean.”

Samsung achieved strong growth in sales of mobile devices. For example, the Galaxy S II sold well, and this model went on to chalk up 5 million sales by the end of July. A strong performance in the smartphone market helped Samsung increase its market share, to become the third-largest smartphone vendor. However, its overall share dropped year-on-year, and grew only marginally quarter-on-quarter, mainly due to Samsung’s weaker presence in more price-sensitive market segments.

Apple continued to exceed expectations, even though the iPhone 4 will soon be replaced by a new model. Part of its growth came from the 42 new carriers and 15 new countries that it entered in the second quarter of 2011, which brought its total coverage to 100 countries. This expansion caused its inventory to grow a little by the end of the second quarter of 2011, when sales to end users stood at 19.6 million units. In mainland China, Apple is the seventh-largest mobile phone vendor and the third-largest smartphone vendor.

Research In Motion’s (RIM’s) share of the smartphone market declined to 12 percent in the second quarter of 2011, from 19 percent a year ago. Also, the company lost its No. 5 position in the worldwide ranking of mobile device vendors to ZTE. Demand for RIM’s devices in the second quarter was impaired by an ageing portfolio and delays in shipping products. In the coming quarters RIM will have to deal with increased competition to its messaging offering and manage a platform migration from BlackBerry 7 to QNX.

Google and Apple are the obvious winners in the smartphone ecosystem. The combined share of iOS and Android in the smartphone operating system (OS) market doubled to nearly 62 percent in the second quarter of 2011, up from just over 31 percent in the corresponding period of 2010 (see Table 2). Gartner analysts observed that these two OSs have the usability that consumers enjoy, the apps that consumers feel they need, and increasingly a portfolio of services delivered by the platform owner as well.

Table 2
Worldwide Smartphone Sales to End Users by Operating System in 2Q11 (Thousands of Units)

Operating System 2Q11

Units

2Q11 Market Share (%) 2Q10

Units

2Q10 Market Share (%)
Android 46,775.9 43.4 10,652.7 17.2
Symbian 23,853.2 22.1 25,386.8 40.9
iOS 19,628.8 18.2 8,743.0 14.1
Research In Motion 12,652.3 11.7 11,628.8 18.7
Bada 2,055.8 1.9 577.0 0.9
Microsoft 1,723.8 1.6 3,058.8 4.9
Others 1,050.6 1.0 2,010.9 3.2
Total 107,740.4 100.0 62,058.1 100.0

Source: Gartner (August 2011)

“We expect manufacturers and distributors to remain cautious about raising their stock levels in the second half of 2011, following the recent uncertainty on the world financial markets,” said Annette Zimmermann, principal research analyst at Gartner. Gartner expects sales of mobile devices to grow around 12 percent in 2011.

For more information, see the Gartner report “Market Share: Mobile Communication Devices by Region and Country, 2Q11” which is available on Gartner’s website at http://www.gartner.com/resId=1764117.

22 Comments
  • Anonymous

    I don’t think none of those companies give a shit about where Gartner has them ranked. Seems they all are making hand over foot. So we shouldn’t care either.

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  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_SP4DDCAHGX5TEUVCXRWUBYBSGY Stira

    Comparing devices to operating systems is wrong. The iPhone is smartphone #1, the iOS is not the OS #1.

    • Charles Clout

      iPhone
      iPhone 3g
      iPhone 3gs
      iPhone 4

      The phones above are not one single phone. Why do people always lump the 2 different models on sale (3gs & 4) into a single “phone”. They are vastly different pieces of hardware aren’t they?

      • Anonymous

        Should the iPhone/3G be there since they aren’t even selling it anymore?

        Comparing two products, one of which is just an older model isn’t quite the same as the 150 Android models out there. Apple’s been pretty successful with this and it’s typically the top two selling phones for any given carrier.

        Meanwhile Supercuts is giving away free Android phones with a haircut.

      • Charles Clout

        I was not including the original and 3g in the current figures (hence the mention of the 3gs and 4 specifically) . :)

        Working under that thinking, shouldn’t all Galaxy models be lumped into the same metric (Galaxy S & Galaxy S II, Galaxy R, Galaxy Spica)? What about HTC Desire (Desire, Desire S, Desire Z, Desire HD), they’re all Desires afterall?

        It’s fantastic that Apple are doing so well, don’t get me wrong, but calling the iPhone “1 phone” is silly when there are multiple models of it. I’d love to see a breakdown of models in Apple’s sales figures but they sadly don’t release that data.

        There is no doubt of Apple’s success either way.

      • Anonymous

        Charles Clout  What you say is true though changing the number from one to two is not that big of a deal. Yes, the previous poster was technically wrong but it is still a massive amount of different Android handsets compared to the iPhone.

  • Anonymous

    Damn… I couldn’t care less about the story but I had to comment on how sexy that damn Nexus One is…. I’d grab one RIGHT NOW if it was brand new out the box.

    • Charles Clout

      If it wasn’t for the shitty touchscreen controller, I’d still have mine now. Great handset despite that weakness (well, that and limited storage).

  • Charles Clout

    Pah, DISQUS went wrong and posted my reply as a new post….

  • http://www.droiddoes.com/ Norm

    You can thank the buy one get 20 free DROID sales Verizo has every weekend

    • http://apple.com Yes_iHave_an_iPhone

      Ha so true.

  • Anonymous

    Where can I buy those crazy Android figurines?  They look hilarious and crazy.   

  • Drew

    You guys (BGR) are so full of shit. Why don’t you really tell us what Gartner said. Gartner says that Nokia is STILL the top smartphone manufacturer. And they used the same graph. What kind of story is this..??

    http://www(dot)engadget(dot)com/2011/08/11/nokia-still-ahead-of-apple-in-smartphone-sales-according-to-gar/

    • Anonymous

      Please, apple runs the world…come on..who run da world? Apple

      • Shanghai Dan

        According to the data – Android.  And Nokia.  Followed by Symbian and Samsung.  Apple’s 3rd or 4th…

      • Anonymous

        according to me bitch…i run da world

      • Shanghai Dan

        @Biotechnology2020:disqus News flash: the world is more than your mom’s basement.

    • Idiot

      Are you an invalid or something? BGR says the same damn thing. Maybe you should try reading the whole post before making an idiot of yourself.

    • Idiot

      Are you an invalid or something? BGR says the same damn thing. Maybe you should try reading the whole post before making an idiot of yourself.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_IC7DZDK24C4LNOWEK7ATVKPYSY Edgar Contreras

    I just paid $22.85 for an iPad 2-64GB and my girlfriend loves her Panasonic Lumix GF 1 Camera that we got for $38.76 there arriving tomorrow by UPS. I will never pay such expensive retail prices in stores again. Especially when I also sold a 40 inch LED TV to my boss for $674 which only cost me $62.81 to buy. Here is the website we use to get it all from, CentHub.com

  • Anonymous

    Those are Androids starting to look evil..

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