New study finds average purchase price of handsets on the rise, uptick in smartphone demand to thank
We suppose the uptick in smartphone demand could be to blame, depending on your perspective, but regardless of semantics, a new study put out by J.D. Power and Associates has found that surging interest in high-end handsets is causing the average purchase price of mobiles to shoot upward. Compared to 2007, consumers are currently paying around $9 more on average per phone. The average price rose to $101, up from $92 just six months prior, and it also marks the highest figure found since the study's inception in 2003. Analysts are pegging recent demand in RIM, Palm (saywha?) and Apple devices as the primary culprit, and it's noted that the average price paid for a smartphone these days is $208. Not surprisingly, these folks also found that the percentage of customers who receive free phones on contract has sank from 36% to 33% in the past six months. If you're the number loving type, be sure and hit the read link for lots, lots more where this came from.
[Via RCRWirelessNews]
[Via RCRWirelessNews]
























Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Randy G @ Jun 3rd 2008 12:51AM
If anyone can make a phone that combines the QTEK 9000's huge ass screen (bigger than the iPhones and almost twice the resolution) and the thin-ness of the iPhone, they will rule the smartphone market.
Chris B. @ Jun 3rd 2008 1:43AM
And still the shite phones just keep comin'. If I see another RAZR or slim slider Samsung pawned off as the next coming I'm just going to frickin' lose it. Hey, I can get that RAZR in purple? Wow. Gasp. Awesome!
Just think what the average would be if US buyers could get their grubbies on half of what Vodaphone, O2, or NTT subscribers can buy any day of the week. Heck, we can't even get a subsidized iPaq here in the US!
engadget @ Jun 3rd 2008 1:33PM
I've been saying this for a while. The iPhone woke the millenials up to the allure of smartphones. Thank you Apple. At the same time as the iPhone launch, RIM very astutely was preparing phones with better screens, SD card storage, a camera, and media capabilities. For all those kids that preferred the tactile feedback of the BlackBerry keypad, that became their preferred device. The millenials are the next road warrior and a BlackBerry device will likely be their preferred tool for both business and personal mobile communication.
Taylor @ Jun 3rd 2008 4:25PM
Haha, i noticed that too!
-Taylor