IDC: Apple Watch continues to dominate in smartwatch market share

A combination of device releases, price reductions, and company rationalizations marked the first quarter of 2016 (1Q16) in the worldwide wearables market. According to data from International Data Corporation, (IDC) Worldwide Quarterly Wearable Device Tracker, total shipment volumes reached 19.7 million units in 1Q16, an increase of 67.2% from the 11.8 million units shipped in 1Q15.

The first quarter saw its fair share of significant events to entice customers, with multiple fitness trackers and smartwatches introduced at the major technology shows; post-holiday price reductions on multiple wearables, including the Apple Watch Sport; and greater participation within emerging wearables categories, particularly clothing and footwear. Conversely, several start-ups announced headcount reduction or shut down entirely, underscoring how competitive the wearables market has become.

“The good news is that the wearables market continues to mature and expand,” noted Ramon Llamas, research manager for IDC’s Wearables team, in a statement. “The wearables that we see today are several steps ahead of what we saw when this market began, increasingly taking their cues from form, function, and fashion. That keeps them relevant. The downside is that it is becoming a crowded market, and not everyone is guaranteed success.”

Still, there are two areas where the market shows continued growth: smartwatches and basic wearables (devices which do not run third party applications).

“There’s a clear bifurcation and growth within the wearables market,” said Jitesh Ubrani senior research analyst for IDC’s Mobile Device Trackers in a statement. “Smartwatches attempt to offer holistic experiences by being everything to everyone, while basic wearables like fitness bands, connected clothing, or hearables have a focused approach and often offer specialized use cases.”

Ubrani continued, “It’s shortsighted to think that basic wearables and smartwatches are in competition with each other. Right now, we see both as essential to expand the overall market. The unique feature sets combined with substantial differences in price and performance sets each category apart, and leaves plenty of room for both to grow over the next few years.”

Top Five Wearables Vendors

Fitbit began 2016 the same way it finished 2015: as the undisputed leader in the wearables market. The launch of its new Alta and Blaze devices resulted in million unit shipment volumes for each, pointing to a new chapter of fashion-oriented fitness trackers. It also points to significant declines for its Surge, Charge, Charge HR, and Flex product lines. Still, with a well-segmented portfolio, pricing strategy, and a strong brand, Fitbit’s position is well-established.

Xiaomi supplanted Apple in 1Q16 and captured the number 2 position. The company expanded its line of inexpensive fitness trackers to include heartrate monitoring and also recently launched a kids’ watch to help parents track their children. It should be pointed out that its success is solely based on China, and expanding beyond its home turf will continue to be its largest hurdle.

Apple: According to CEO Tim Cook, the Watch has met the company’s expectations. IDC notes that its total volumes and revenue trailed far behind its iPhone, iPad, and Mac product lines, and did little to stem their declines. Until the next version of the Watch comes out, it would appear that Apple will continuously update its watch bands to keep the product relevant, IDC says.

Garmin finished slightly ahead of Samsung on the strength of its wristbands and watches appealing to a wide range of athletes, most especially golfers, runners, and fitness tracker enthusiasts. While the company added two fitness trackers with the vivoactive HR and the vivofit 3, Garmin launched its first eyeworn device, the Varia Vision In-Sight Display, for cyclists.

Samsung landed in the number 5 position on the success of its Gear S2 and Gear S2 Classic smartwatch. What sets the Gear S2 apart from most other smartwatches is that it is among the very few with a cellular connectivity version, forgoing the need to be constantly tethered to a smartphone. It is also compatible with Android smartphones beyond Samsung’s own, broadening its reach. However, its application selection trails behind what is available for Android Wear and watchOS.

BBK tied* with Samsung for fifth place worldwide. This is the second time that BBK finished among the top five vendors worldwide, having debuted in 3Q15 with its Y01 phone watch for children. The company returns with another phone watch for children, the Y02 with improved water resistance and durability.

Top Five Wearables Vendors, Shipments, Market Share and Year-Over-Year Growth, Q1 2016 (Units in Millions)
IDC: Top Five Wearables Vendors, Shipments, Market Share and Year-Over-Year Growth, Q1 2016 (Units in Millions)
*IDC declares a statistical tie in the worldwide wearables market when there is less than one tenth of one percent (0.1%) difference in the unit shipment share of two or more vendors.

Top Five Basic Wearables Vendors, Shipments, Market Share and Year-Over-Year Growth, Q1 2016 (Units in Millions)
IDC: Top Five Basic Wearables Vendors, Shipments, Market Share and Year-Over-Year Growth, Q1 2016 (Units in Millions)

Top Five Smartwatch Vendors, Shipments, Market Share and Year-Over-Year Growth, Q1 2016 (Units in Millions)
IDC: Top Five Smartwatch Vendors, Shipments, Market Share and Year-Over-Year Growth, Q1 2016 (Units in Millions)

Table Notes:
• Data is preliminary and subject to change. (You can say that again. – MDN Ed.)
• Vendor shipments are branded device shipments and exclude OEM sales for all vendors.
• The “Vendor” represents the current parent company (or holding company) for all brands owned and operated as a subsidiary.
• The table labeled “Top Five Wearables Vendors…” represents the sum of both basic and smart wearables equaling the total wearable market size.
• The table labeled “Top Five Basic Wearables Vendors…” represents the total basic wearable market size.
• The table labeled “Top Five Smartwatch Vendors…” does not equal total smart wearable market size as certain form factors (i.e. eyewear, wristbands) are excluded.

Source: International Data Corporation

MacDailyNews Take: Apple does not release Apple Watch unit sales figures. This is merely a guess by IDC, the company that brought you such hits as:
• IDC lowballed Apple’s Mac sales by 9.7% last quarter – October 23, 2014
• IDC again undercounts Mac unit sales – October 9, 2014
• IDC estimates for iPhone sales in India seem to be grossly incorrect – July 17, 2013

And, our all-time fav:
• IDC: Windows Phone to surpass Apple’s iOS by 2016 – June 6, 2012

As we wrote last August and IDC has now done:

Lumping in Apple Watch with Fitbit bands is like throwing bicycles and cars together into a “vehicles market.” Meaningless stupidity.

If they’re interested in providing meaningful reports regarding wearables, IDC obviously needs to break out “fitness wearables” and “smartwatches” into separate reports, with Apple Watch in each.

9 Comments

  1. Live in Canada – set up my credit card in my apple wallet today – Apple Watch was flawless in transactions at a grocery store and Starblechs. Apple Pay and Apple Watch rock!!

  2. IDC will always manufacture a market so as to prevent Apple from being the leader. With iPhone it was Apple against all other mobile phones. With iPad, it was called a “media tablet” and lumped in against against Kindles and hundreds of millions of $50 white box drugstore tablets. With the Watch, it’s “competing” against the entire universe of wearable electronics, probably including flashing LED earrings.

    1. This is so obvious it’s funny. IDC has been doing this for years. Apple enters a market, or creates a new one, and IDC will find a way to throw in counts from irrelevant products to minimize Apple’s product sales.

  3. “Until the next version of the Watch comes out, it would appear that Apple will continuously update its watch bands to keep the product relevant”…

    Because nothing bespeaks technological relevance more than the fashion cues on the strap a device is attached to….

    …still, it feels sadly true that “all-new” watch bands are the biggest innovation across Apple’s whole line this year, where the rest of the products are a story of moderate iteration (the PinkBook, phones (with an “all new” iPhone 5 to be fair), or in other cases, the failure to iterate – MB Airs, Mac Mini, Mac Pro….

    …still holding out some hope for slimmed down nicely cased MB Pros (in the market for one), but scarcely a hint of a rumor on that front since 8-9 months ago, except rumors that not much will happen…. …and if they do, what complement of ports will still exist…?

  4. This is wrong. Samsung is the leading brand in smartphones (and other things) Apple is just horrible. It makes me throw up. There are tons of reasons Samsung is better than apple like Samsung phones support SD cards, Apple doesn’t. Also the the iPhone 6 has a crappy 8 MP camera, the Samsung Galaxy S7 and S7 Edge have a 16 MP camera. so everyone who says Apple is better than Samsung, SHUT THE HELL UP!!! You’re wrong.

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