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High prices hamper iPhone 3G sales in India

High prices hamper iPhone 3G sales in India

By:  John Ribeiro  On: 17 Sep 2008 For: IDG News Service (Bangalore Bureau) (hs) Creator

The country adds 8 million mobile users a month, but they are slow to buy the latest Apple handset. One reason is the lack of 3G networks. But the US$715 price for the base model is putting off even long-time users of Apple products

A spokeswoman for Bharti Airtel said the pricing of the iPhone 3G was decided by Apple and not by Bharti Airtel. The company has tried to soften the impact on customers by bundling 500M bytes per month of free data downloads for one year.

Both Bharti Airtel and Vodafone have also tied up with financing companies to offer the phone on installments, but the market for the product is still sluggish.

"The people who would have picked up the iPhone 3G are mainly those status-driven types who will flaunt a fancy device, even if its utility to them is limited," said K. Purushottam, executive director of Wep Solutions India, an IT services company in Bangalore.

Apple and the operators are trying to skim the market with these high-price devices, even though there aren't 3G networks in the country, and no one knows how the 3G service will be priced when they are available, he added.

Even long-term users of Apple products were put off by the high price of the iPhone 3G. The cost and some of Apple's policies discouraged Sujay Rao, a micro-neurosurgeon in Bangalore, from buying the iPhone 3G for himself and his brother.

"There is a break with the Mac philosophy, a tendency to go the Microsoft way, when you are told that you are not allowed to forward an SMS [Short Message Service] from the phone, that you are not allowed to download any freeware unless it is from the Apple site," said Rao, who uses his Mac extensively, including in the operating room to record information about surgeries. Rao also objects to having to turn in the iPhone to the company to change a battery.

By its high prices, Apple may have also positioned its products in the smaller smartphone segment of the Indian market, in which there are already strong, entrenched brands. Smartphones accounted for only about 4 to 5 percent of mobile phones sold in India last year, and their share is likely to go to around 7 per cent this year, according to Gartner, which includes the iPhone 3G under smartphones.

The smartphone market in the country is estimated to be 7 million to 8 million units in a year, and is currently dominated by Nokia, said Gartner's Gupta.

Bharti Airtel is not targeting the mass market with the iPhone 3G, but only high-value customers, admitted the company spokeswoman.

Apple may, however, be changing its strategy in India, including by dropping phone prices. The company is reportedly planning to offer the phones with yet another operator, the large government-owned Bharat Sanchar Nigam Limited (BSNL). Apple declined to comment on a tie-up with BSNL, saying that it does not comment on rumors and speculation.

Apple may also be planning to offer phones in India that are not locked to any operator, as do other vendors like Nokia, according to sources. In this regard, it is in talks with a large distributor in India to get its phones to the market and at much lower prices, these sources said.










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John Ribeiro John Ribeiro is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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