About
40 percent of adult Apple iPhone owners in the United States are
interested in buying the company’s new Apple Watch, according to a new
Reuters/Ipsos poll.
The
high-tech smartwatch, which will range in price from $350 to $17,000
for an 18-karat gold model, is Apple first major new product in five
years and consumer demand for the device is being closely watched by
competitors and investors.
Owners
of the iPhone are a particularly important market for Apple as it
launches the new watch, which goes on sale April 24. Because the watch
needs an iPhone to work fully, analysts say the most likely pool of
initial buyers will already have an Apple smartphone in their pockets.
BTIG
analyst Walter Piecyk said that with more than 100 million active
iPhone users in the United States and closer to half a billion globally,
the survey was “pretty encouraging” for a product that has not been
seen in shops, even if was unclear how much of the interest would
translate into purchases.
Pacific
Crest Securities analyst Andrew Hargreaves said it was not clear how
many people wanted or needed a smartwatch. But he expected Apple’s cache
and marketing might to deliver strong initial sales of the Apple Watch.
“Winning Apple customers is more realistic at this point,” said Hargreaves.
The watch allows users to check email, listen to music and make phone calls.
Ipsos
surveyed 2,469 Americans aged 18 and older online between March 9 and
March 17 and found that 24 percent expressed an interest in purchasing
the Apple Watch, including 10 percent of those describing themselves as
“very interested.” The data was weighted to reflect the U.S. population
and has a credibility interval, a measure of accuracy, of plus or minus
2.2 percentage points.
Among
the iPhone owners, 39 percent were interested in purchasing the Apple
watch, including 17 percent describing themselves as very interested.
There were 788 iPhone owners in the survey with a credibility interval
of plus or minus 4 percentage points.
Discussions
about the watch have flooded online social media channels such as
Twitter and Facebook since Apple held a splashy event in San Francisco
on March 9 to showcase the watch.
Social
media chatter about the Apple watch was 15 percent positive and 5
percent negative in the week following Apple’s event, according to an
analysis that the firm Networked Insights conducted for Reuters. The
remaining 80 percent was neutral. By contrast, the social conversation
for Apple’s iPhone 6 during the same week was 5 percent positive and 0
percent negative, according to the analysis.
Among
the conversations relating to the Apple watch during the one-week
period, 5.8 percent of the comments showed an intent to purchase,
according to Networked Insights, which analyses tweets, public Facebook
posts and other sources. Social comments about the iPhone 6, which has
been on sale since September, showed a 2.9 percent purchase intent
during the same week.
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.
More
than half of iPhone users in the Reuters/Ipsos survey believe that a
smartwatch in the near future will be an essential gadget that’s as
common as the smartphone, whereas 44 percent a broader poll of U.S.
adults felt that way.
Posted by : Gizmeon
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