Apple
Inc’s new smartwatch may be a tough sell, with 69 percent of Americans
indicating they are not interested in buying the gadget, according to a
Reuters/Ipsos poll.
However,
the survey also showed limited awareness of the watch. The poll was
taken after Apple Chief Executive Tim Cook rolled out the product on
Monday, and only about half of respondents said they had heard news of
the timepiece in the last few days.
Also,
in an encouraging sign for Apple, roughly 13 percent of survey
respondents who did not own an iPhone said that they would consider
buying one in order to buy an Apple Watch, which needs an iPhone to work
fully.
Apple
overcame scepticism about the iPad and iPod when they first debuted,
but the survey suggests that the world’s largest technology company has
work to do to make the watch ubiquitous.
The new watch, a test of Cook’s leadership, is the company’s first new product in five years, and it hits stores on April 24.
It
allows users to check email, listen to music and make phone calls from
their wrist. Apple will sell various versions, from a $349 ‘sport’
edition to a $17,000 18-karat gold timepiece.
Ipsos
surveyed 1,245 Americans online between March 9 and March 13. The data
was weighted to reflect the U.S. population and has a credibility
interval of plus or minus 3.2 percentage points. For poll details see:
polling.reuters.com
Apple
did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the poll. More
than half of respondents, 52 percent, agreed with the statement that
smartwatches are a “passing fad.”
One-quarter
of respondents said they were interested in purchasing the Apple Watch,
but 69 percent said they had no desire, and 6 percent said they were
unsure.
Initial
demand for the watch is expected to come primarily from existing iPhone
users, but its wider success is seen depending on whether developers
create enticing apps tailored to the device, so-called killer apps.
Apple
is among several large tech companies looking to jumpstart a new market
for “wearable” electronic devices. Samsung Electronics, Sony Corp and
LG Electronics have all released their own smartwatches, many of them
powered by software developed by Internet company Google Inc. See
graphic: link.reuters.com/gak82w.
But
consumers have yet to cotton to the notion of wearable devices. Google
recently halted sales to consumers of Glass, a $1,500 screen attached to
glasses which were routinely mocked for their awkward appearance.
Roughly
4.6 million smartwatches were sold globally in 2014, according to
research firm Strategy Analytics, a fraction of the more than 1 billion
smartphones sold worldwide.
Many
in the tech industry hope that Apple, famous for its marketing savvy
and loyal fans, will have the power to transform the smartwatches into a
product that appeals to the general public. Some 46 percent of
respondents said that the Apple Watch had a “cool factor.” But only 29
percent said they were more interested in purchasing an Apple Watch than
another brand of smartwatch.
Analysts expect that Apple will sell between 10 million and 32 million watches in 2015.
Posted by : Gizmeon
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