Interesting statistic from ABI research.
1 in 3 Android devices are actually forked Android (ASOP, non-certified Android) which do not run Google services. Furthermore, the majority of growth is now coming from this segment.

Interesting statistic from ABI research.
1 in 3 Android devices are actually forked Android (ASOP, non-certified Android) which do not run Google services. Furthermore, the majority of growth is now coming from this segment.

Some short notes on how I view the mobile app ecosystem situation.
There are three business models for earning money on mobile apps.
There has recently been a lot of discussion on the success of the in-app-purchase model, and how the prepaid model is becoming less popular. In contrast, there has not been much discussion on how well the advertising models works.
In AppAnnie’s report, “The Future of Mobile & Portable Gaming” (you need to download the report for free), they clearly show that advertising does not generate much revenue. Prepaid is 44% of revenue while in-app-purchases are 51%. Advertising is only 5% of revenue.
The answer is, prepaid and in-app-purchase are working. Advertising is not.
AppAnnie has the answer for Q313.


What is immediately evident is that in the case of iOS, the rankings for “downloads” and “revenue” are similar. The countries listed are simply the countries with high GDP. This is totally expected.
The rankings for Google Play tell us a very different story. In downloads, the BRIC countries (countries with large, fast-growing economies) are making a strong showing with the exception of China which blocks Google sites. In revenue, the ranking is very different with Japan/South Korea dominating the scene. We also do not see the BRIC countries in revenue rankings.
My reasoning is as follows;
In mid-2013, I wrote (in Japanese) about the unhealthy dependency of Google Play revenue growth on Asia.
Google Play growth is dependent on APAC whereas iOS App Store is more balanced.

Google Play is dominated by Japanese/Korean titles

Google Play APAC revenue is dominated by Japan/Korea

In fact, Japan revenue is so strong that AppAnnie released a report with the title “Japan Spotlight: Hey Big Spender! Japan Outspends US, Continues Its Meteoric Growth”. In this report, AppAnnie tells us that Japanese Google Play revenues are disproportionately high (twice normal levels in comparison to iOS);
In the last year, Google Play app revenue has caught up with iOS in Japan, compared to the rest of the world where iOS app revenue is well over double that of Google Play on an aggregate basis.
From these data points, I predicted the following;
We may be starting to see this happening.
On January 8th, 2014, Distimo released an analysis of December 2013. In that report, they mentioned the following (bold styles added by me);
The month of December, including the holiday business, led to a revenue growth of 18 percent for the combined revenue from the Apple App Store and Google Play compared to November. Relative to July 2013, the combined revenue grew by 38 percent. Looking at the app store level, both graphs show a clearly steeper slope. This increase translates into a growth in revenue of 17 percent for Google Play and an even stronger 18 percent for the Apple App Store from November to December 2013.
Although it is irrational to draw conclusions from a single month’s worth of data, if we see this trend continuing, then yes, we might be seeing the effects of my prediction. Ideally, we would also like to see market growth broken down by country, data which AppAnnie may soon provide.

I’ve been trying unsuccessfully to find any indication of how the Moto G, the low-cost smartphone from Motorola is selling. I’m interested in how well their strategy, that is selling mid-spec smartphones at low-end prices by foregoing profits, is working. I strongly suspect that it is not, but I need data to verify that.
In the meantime, I found this funny article by Rolfe Winker for the Wall Street Journal. It describes very well the almost comical confusion and utter lack of coherent strategy at Google-Motorola. I’ve quoted some parts of it below.
The price cut on the Moto X extends a strategy laid out by Motorola Chief Executive Dennis Woodside to undercut rivals. Motorola’s lower-end Moto G phone, released in November, starts at $179 without a contract in the U.S., compared with $250 for a comparable Samsung device at Verizon. VZ -0.48%
OK. So the strategy is to undercut rivals on price.
Analysts say that low off-contract pricing is likely to have a bigger impact outside the U.S., where a larger share of smartphone users buy their phones directly, rather than by signing wireless contracts.
Now such a strategy will work best outside of the U.S. It won’t make much difference in the U.S.
The Moto X is sold only in North and South America, and the new lower price is only available in the U.S. for now.
Uh oh. But the lower price is only going to be available for the U.S.
Nice.
P.S.
In the last part of this article, there is a quote from an analyst;
Brand, distribution and product breadth are critical to sales volumes, and here Moto falls desperately behind [Samsung] still.
If this is true and I suspect that it is, we can also expect the sales of the Moto G to also be rather insignificant, adding to the long list of Google branded products that saw major hype, but failed to sell well.
I just had to link to this. Maybe I’ll write some of my thoughts later.
“Watch Steve Jobs’ First Demonstration of the Mac for the Public, Unseen Since 1984”
The Wall Street Journal published an article titled “Chromebooks Take Other Mobile PCs to School” which cited estimates of laptop and tablet sales to U.S. K-12 schools.
This compares to data that was released from the NPD group late last year. The NPD group data was for PC (desktop and laptop) and tablet sales through “U.S. commercial channels” (sales through VAR that are mostly targeted towards education, government and corporations). I have previously commented on the NPD data on this blog (1, 2, 3).
The NPD Group data and following discussions pointed to the following;
Here I would like to take a look at the FutureSource data that the WSJ cites to better understand the picture.

The FutureSource data seems to confirm the following;
Additionally, it seems that Android tablets are non-existent in schools.
As for the comments in the WSJ article that are in favor of the Chromebooks, they are interestingly from the school IT departments: the “orifices”.
One fan is Kyle Laauser, the information technology director at Saint Joseph Academy,
…
Explaining the purchase, Mr. Laauser pointed to the devices’ low price, $279 each including a $30 setup fee paid to Google, as well as the ease with which he could set them up for the entire student body.
All in all, the WSJ article seems to be in good agreement with the NPD data and the ensuing discussions.
Distribution channels matter a lot in selling most kind of products.
This is why Google Nexus products fail to sell well, Samsung is so strong in Android smartphones, and why the Moto G is doomed to failure.
Micheal Fisher wrote a great article a while ago about this.
“Should I Trust My Phone Salesman?”
in the United States, manufacturer brands succeed or fail on the backs of the salespeople. And a salesperson who knows nothing about a platform isn’t going to recommend it.
In the US, at least, a phone lives or dies by the retail staff in the carrier stores. Nothing else matters. Not price. Not features. Not apps. If the retail staff doesn’t like you… you die.
I think people are worried that the iPhone is getting ‘sold against’ in stores – that we’re talking people out of the iPhone. And that is true.
In some previous posts (1, 2 in Japanese), I argued that it is very unlikely that the low-price Moto G smartphone will succeed in developing countries, despite being priced below $200 and having relatively high specs.
My argument was based on basic marketing principles, the 4Ps of the marketing mix. In essence, successfully selling a product requires the following to be considered;
The Moto G has the Product and Price right. Although the price is a little bit on the high end for developing countries, the high specifications should be able to offset that. The problem lies in Promotion and Distribution. My understanding was that the Motorola brand and the distribution channel was weak in developing countries due to historically having put little effort in these regions.
A recent report by Jana (“Watch out Android: Windows Phone could become the world’s 2nd most popular OS”), although focused on Windows phone, also confirms that Motorola’s brand is weak in developing countries.

With this in mind, I continue to believe that the Moto G will struggle in developing countries.
Some analysts comment that the low price of the Moto G phone, [made possible only by Google’s willingness to forego profit in exchange for unit sales](http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052702303497804579242511374858016), will put pressure on Samsung to lower its margins. I expect that this will not be the case, and the Moto G will be a non-issue.
Interestingly, Nokia continues to be very strong which is a good sign for Windows Phone.
Microsoft reported record revenue for 4Q13. Tim Anderson has a good summary on his blog.
The overall trend is;
If we look at Microsoft’s traditional strengths which are software for both consumers and corporations, we see that they are going in different directions; consumer software is declining whereas corporate software sales are strong. Corporate software sales are their largest segment, so its a good thing that that is growing.
Many people would say that their weakening consumer sales are a cause for concern and that eventually corporate sales will also start to fall. However, evidence for this is weak. With the limited information that we have, especially about the corporate market and how this will evolve, I don’t think we can reasonably know what will happen to Microsoft in the future.
I would like to take a bit of time to summarize how Microsoft came to be this strong in corporates, and gain some perspective as to how things might pan out.
Microsoft can best be seen as a serial disruptor. In many times of their history, you can see how they created a simpler software product that ran on low-end hardware. This enabled them to enter an existing market from the low-end, and from there, Microsoft relentlessly improved their product to eventually capture the high-end.
Because of this history or starting out at the low-end and then moving up-market, Microsoft has managed to capture multiple key footholds in the corporate IT value chain.
Corporate software solutions can live for a very long time. Consider how long COBOL systems are still being used.
The rapid take-up of Windows was not because Windows replaced legacy systems. It was because there was a sudden need to put computers on the desks of every office worker and to provide email and Intranet services. Windows was competing with non-consumption.
Now that Windows is so dominant in the workplace, there is little possibility of any non-consumption remaining. The only other way an entrant could penetrate corporate IT is to attack from the low-end hoping that Microsoft would retreat up-market. This cannot succeed primarily because corporations are generally reluctant to switch their current platforms, and secondly because Microsoft’s culture is to defend the low-end.
Even though mobile platforms are gaining in popularity, I see little reason to predict that this will encourage corporate IT to change their platforms. The more likely scenario is the inverse; that mobile platforms will have to adapt to the requirements of legacy corporate IT solutions.
If so, the end result is that corporate IT will have to support more devices, not less. This would mean more servers, more licenses, more corporate IT solutions. Microsoft’s record quarter is no fluke. I expect them to continue to have strong corporate revenue.
Of course Microsoft would like to own the mobile market as well so that they could provide and end-to-end solution. However, they would still remain in a strong position even if they couldn’t.
The Wall Street Journal is reporting that Apple is preparing iPhones with bigger screens (4.5 inches and > 5 inches).
Now we all know that Apple is not like Samsung, and that they don’t simply create any screen size they can imagine. We know that Apple makes very careful decisions so it’s prudent to analyze what the sizes are like; i.e. what a 4.5 inch screen would actually look and feel like.
I superimposed a 4.5 inch screen size on top of the current iPhone 5s. You can see that the width of a 4.5 inch screen would actually fit in the current iPhone 5s dimensions if the bezels surrounding the sides of the screen could be eliminated. Since I doubt that a taller iPhone would be comfortable in your pocket, Apple would have to also reduce the height of the top and bottom bezels, but there is definitely space for that.
If Apple is really preparing a 4.5 inch screen iPhone, this is most likely the path that they would take. As I mentioned in a previous post, I seriously doubt that Apple would create a larger sized phone that would be more cumbersome to carry with you all the time. Also, reducing side bezels is something that Apple has been doing quite well with the iPad mini and iPad Air.
