Tags: apps, blackberry, getjar, iphone
| Mobile apps more expensive in North America | |||||
| By Shaun Zelber, March 22nd, 2010 :: Apps & Sites | |||||
Mobile device users in North America pay a lot more for mobile applications than consumers in other geographic regions, a study shows. Smartphone applications in North America have an average selling price of $1.09, while in the next closest region, Europe, the ASP is below $0.80, according to commissioned by Getjar. For developers, the study shows that mobile advertising will play a more significant role in revenue generation in Indonesia, Brazil, India and China, where app prices are low. “For the emerging markets, it is a volumes game,” the study said. The study also found that the number of downloads of mobile applications is rising quickly. Downloads are forecast to soar from more than 7 billion last year to almost 50 billion by 2012, a compound annual growth rate of 92%. During the same timeframe, the amount of revenue from paid downloads, advertising and virtual goods is expected to rise from $4.1 billion to $17.5 billion, a CAGR of 62%. Mobile phone subscriptions are expected to exceed 5 billion by the end of 2210, with more than 27% of them being data subscribers, excluding messaging, the study said. In the next three years, that number is expected to reach 45%, with North America leading the way with almost 60%. In the U.S., nearly all smartphone and many feature phones require buyers to have a data subscription. In the U.S., Research in Motion’s Blackberry platform accounted for 41.6% of the smartphone market in the last quarter of 2009, followed by Apple’s iPhone, 25.3%, according to ComScore. | |||||
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