Wednesday, September 14, 2011

Strong Projection for iPhone 5, Survey Finds

Apple hasn't announced that there will be an iPhone 5 yet, let alone released any details on the refresh of its top-selling smartphone Relevant Products/Services, but a majority of current iPhone users are ready to trade up for the new model, sight unseen.

That's one of the findings in a survey from ChangeWave of 2,200 mobile Relevant Products/Services-phone users conducted Aug. 2-10. The poll suggests that despite all the competition, two-thirds of iPhone 3GS or iPhone 4 users want a new iPhone, while 31 percent of all respondents are very or somewhat likely to get one, up from 25 percent in the same survey before the iPhone 4 was launched last summer.

Sprint Customers Ready

And with Sprint Nextel believed to be on the verge of becoming the third carrier to stock the iPhone, 54 percent of Sprint subscribers answered that they're significantly or somewhat more likely to buy an iPhone, as were 53 percent of T-Mobile customers. A merger with AT&T Relevant Products/Services, the first iPhone carrier, would make that possible.

The survey follows on the heels of a July online PriceGrabber poll of 2,852 consumers that found 35 percent plan to grab a new iPhone, with 52 percent of them indicating they'll buy it within the first year of release; 30 percent plan to get one by the end of 2011; and 14 percent hope to buy it within the first month. Seven percent will get online to buy it within the first week. That survey was conducted July 1-11.

Apple has released a new iPhone every summer since 2007, usually in June.

The latest data Relevant Products/Services "shows that for most, the iPhone remains the most usable of all the devices," said Gartner Relevant Products/Services Research analyst Ken Dulaney. "The users are extremely happy with the balance of functionality and simplicity and until Apple disappoints them, they remain committed."

In a second survey of 2,297 consumers, Sept. 6-12, ChangeWave found that the resignation of Apple CEO Steve Jobs stands to have almost no effect on the demand for Apple products.

No Jobs Loss

Only 4 percent said Jobs' resignation makes them less likely to buy Apple products in the future, while 89 percent said the change had no effect. (continued...)

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