|
Acer’s
growth narrowed the distance between it and Dell to less than
half a million units. Acer’s substantial growth increased its
lead over #4 Toshiba, which shipped 2.3 million notebooks in the
quarter.
| Table 1:
Notebook PC Shipments, Share and Growth by Supplier
|
|
Brand
|
Q3'06
|
Q4'06 |
Change |
Q4'06 |
|
HP |
3.6M |
4.7M |
29% |
20.0% |
|
Dell |
3.6M |
3.5M |
-2% |
15.0% |
|
Acer |
2.4M |
3.1M |
29% |
13.3% |
|
Toshiba |
2.2M |
2.3M |
5% |
9.8% |
|
Lenovo |
1.7M |
2.0M |
18% |
8.4% |
|
Fujitsu-Siemens |
1.3M |
1.2M |
-7% |
5.3% |
|
Sony |
0.8M |
1.2M |
40% |
5.0% |
|
Asus |
0.7M |
1.0M |
49% |
4.4% |
|
Apple |
1.0M |
1.0M |
-7% |
4.1% |
|
All Others |
3.1M |
3.4M |
11% |
14.5% |
|
Total |
20.5M |
23.4M |
14% |
|
The notebook PC market grew 27.7%
in 2006 year over year to 78.802 million units according to a report by DisplaySearch.
In Q4'06, on the strength of unit shipments that surged more
than 29% quarter over quarter, HP once again took the top spot
in the notebook PC market with shipments of just under 4.7
million units to capture 20% share of the notebook PC market.
The quarter was less kind to Dell, which trailed HP, but perhaps
more importantly lost share as unit shipments fell slightly from
Q3'06 to Q4'06, despite a notebook PC market that grew more than
14.4% quarter over quarter.
The other big winner in Q4'06 was Acer, which, like HP, saw
notebook PC shipments swell 29% quarter to 3.1 million units,
surpassing the 3 million mark for the first time. Acer’s growth
narrowed the distance between it and Dell to less than half a
million units. Acer’s substantial growth increased its lead over
#4 Toshiba, which shipped 2.3 million notebooks in the quarter.
Lenovo also had a strong fourth quarter, shipping slightly less
than 2 million notebooks. Similar to HP and Acer, Lenovo also
beat the average quarter/quarter growth rate for the notebook
market with 18.2% quarter over quarter growth.
While HP led on a worldwide basis, on a regional level, HP held
the top spot in APAC and Latin America, as well as EMEA, which
it took from Acer in Q4'06. Dell held on to its lead over HP in
North America; however its share advantage fell from over 6% in
Q3’06 to a 4% lead in Q4'06.
Sony (40.6%), HP (29.4%), Acer (29.0%) and Lenovo (18.2%) all
easily surpassed the average quarter over quarter growth rate
for the notebook PC market. By contrast, Toshiba's gains lagged
the market, and Apple, Dell, and Fujitsu/Fujitsu-Siemens were
all down quarter over quarter.
The varying degrees of
success in Q4'06 between brands are a function of different
target markets for each brand. "With an increasing number of PC
buyers choosing notebooks for their first PC, and existing PC
owners upgrading to notebooks from desktop PCs, a strong retail
strategy is critical for success. Indicators of aggressive
retail strategies for notebook PCs could easily be seen in the
quantity and variety of Black Friday advertisements for notebook
PCs in 2006 compared to 2005," said John Jacobs, Director of
Notebook Market Research at DisplaySearch. "Brands that had the
most success in 2006 also had a wide range of product offerings
during the holiday season, from entry-level to top-of-the-line
systems, and often bundled these systems with printers and
occasionally flat panel monitors."
Brands that were hungry for market share were quick to drop the
street price premium, even running "free upgrade" promotions
encouraging customers to make the transition. Additionally,
brands with a heavier reliance on the enterprise market faced
the additional hurdle of convincing IT managers to embrace wide
products and support additional configurations.
Looking a year ahead to Q4'07, DisplaySearch expects the
notebook PC market to continue to surge, growing to almost 97
million units.
|
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