IDC Tablet Forecast: iPad, Android, and Just a Little Windows by 2016

Windows 8 should be just as successful as Windows Phone by 2016. Uh-oh

If IDC is accurate—and again, their record is mixed at best—iPad and Android will continue dominating the tablet market through 2016, with Windows taking up the rear with just 10 percent market share. This means that in IDC’s view, Windows will obtain roughly the same market share in the tablet market as it will in the smart phone market.

I just wrote about IDC’s view of the smart phone market and its overly optimistic appraisal of Windows Phone.

According to IDC, the iPad will still be the number one tablet by the end of 2012, with about 54 percent market share. This is a bit higher than other predictions, which suggested that the iPad would fall below 50 percent market share this year. Android is number two with about 43 percent market share. And Windows magically comes in at around 3 percent, though it’s not clear anyone is buying such devices.

So how do things change by 2016? IDC’s crystal ball shows iPad falling less than expected to a hair under 50 percent market share, followed by Android (interestingly, down a bit to a little under 40 percent market share) and Windows (10.3 percent). As with the Windows Phone numbers I link to above, only Windows grows big time in this time period, IDC believes: over 69 percent.

Ooh, another chart.

So what does IDC think about Windows’ chances in the tablet market?

“IDC predicts Windows-based tablets (including Windows 8 and Windows RT) will grab share from both iOS and Android,” the firm write in its tablet forecast. (On a related note, IDC also believes that tablet growth “comes at the expense of eReaders,” but not PCs for some reason. This report doesn’t mention the words “PC” or “computer” at all. Curious.

Discuss this Article 14

jimbie882
on Dec 5, 2012

I think Windows has a good chance of beating Android. It is very hard to forecast marketshare 4 years out especially since Windows 8 is barely out the gates. Microsoft and its partners have not yet released its full slate of tablets.

Microsoft needs a better name for Windows RT. This is the biggest problem and weakness. Just call it the "Windows" tablet. It is literally the Windows tablet with the Start Menu as its user interface.

The alternative tablet is the Windows Pro Tablet that offers the desktop. In this case, Microsoft needs to fix how the desktop is used or accessed. Perhaps the desktop needs to go away. The legacy Windows programs should be opened on the Start Menu. Perhaps the Start Menu Tiles should goes away whenever a legacy program is opened from the Start Menu and remain opened in a window in the Start Menu background.

Microsoft and its partners needs to release the full slate of Tablets. Where are the 7 inch Tablets? There needs to be more Ultrabook Windows Notebooks with Touch Screens.

The Intel-Microsoft alliance is broken. Intel is not moving fast enough in creating new power saving CPUs. However, I do think in 2 years, the problem might be resolved, but it is still 5 years behinds ARM.

SoundersFan
on Dec 5, 2012

I could believe this if it were ARM based Windows RT tablets only, but you mention that this includes Intel based Windows 8 tablets. This is a dynamicly changing market. Perhaps Clover Trail and what ever its successor is will change things up and give Windows based tablets a leg up.

MGray
on Dec 5, 2012

Personally I think Apple will suffer more than IDC has predicted due to the cheaper cost of Android devices. I think for Microsoft to gain any market share they really need to follow the Amazon model and sell base hardware (Surface RT) at very cheap prices ($300 or less) to encourage the jump to the Microsoft ecosystem. The big problem for Microsoft is that for most people, Windows 7 works, so why spend money to upgrade to Windows 8 if it means I have to buy a new touch screen laptop or desktop to make the most out of it. By selling the Windows RT device cheap and easily, they might encourage more to move to the Windows 8 desktop.

GoodThings2Life
on Dec 5, 2012

Agreed, entirely.

GWLeibniz
on Dec 5, 2012

I also agree.
But MS's market share will remain low on units sold, unless it does some spectacular volte face on prices. Where it will work is in the tablets' use in the enterprise for PC replacements for tougher tasks than those proposed at the much vaunted Barclays bank purchase.
Today at a large British retail operation we were discussing rejigging the shop floor applications to use Win8 which was never an option on iPAD

The Barclays bank purchase should be viewed through a couple of lenses - one Barclay's is a tacky operation (allegedly) and when you divide the number of tablets by their retail branches you see that it works out at roughly 3 per branch. Enough to equip some sales bunnies to ask some simple questions and my guess, no more

bennett_cg
on Dec 5, 2012

It is strange that IDC considers a Windows 8 tablet analogous to iOS and Android tablets. Windows RT is very similar, but I can't discern the logic for a device with 8 Professional being in the same class as consumption devices.

I'm not going to waste too much time thinking about it: IDC will just change its mind in 3 months anyway.

Waethorn
on Dec 5, 2012

I think the reason why IDC doesn't call up PC usage is because BYOD just isn't materializing the way that they had originally thought. Just like with cloud computing, companies aren't embracing it the way it was previously predicted. Only 4-5 years ago, it was said that enterprise companies would ditch all of their server farms by now and the world's leading cloud providers would house almost all of the data, but that was an exaggerated prediction that just didn't happen.

Silversee
on Dec 5, 2012

Windows won't have a credible chance as a consumer tablet platform until Microsoft and its partners put in a serious effort to launch it as such, including a major retail push and a serious realignment of pricing.

In my view, Microsoft's marketing around the Windows 8 launch is failing by promoting Windows as something new and exciting for your PC--just as it always has done.

Consumers already know what PCs are. They've even seen (and mostly yawned at) touchscreen PCs. There is no real excitement there.

What they probably don't know is that Windows might be great on tablets, or even that Windows-based tablets exist. (Walk into Best Buy and try to find the promotion for 'Windows Tablets'.)

The Surface ads are actually the right thing to be doing--but the Surface is completely non-existent at retail unless you happen to live next to a Microsoft store. And there are few alternative tablets to be found at price points that consumers would consider friendly.

Microsoft needs to reposition Windows 8/RT as a modern, mobile, touch-first tablet operating system, and it has so far failed to do so.

Roger Andre
on Dec 5, 2012

If the laptop form factor dies off a little, I'm pretty sure it will make a come back......imagine the having the computing power and storage capacity to take an impression of your cloud based existence for offline work....maybe the entire web will be synced to your device like a hologram and you just sign in for the bits that you own. We are in an intermediary phase at the moment.....it may be dangerous to throw out the local storage right now. Greasy screen anyone?

SamR
on Dec 5, 2012

I am the biggest Windows fanboi ever. All my desktop machines are upgraded to Windows 8 and I am loving it. I just ignore Metro.

Just bought my first tablet ..... I bought an iPad 4. I did not seriously consider Surface or Android.

Why?

Everyone I know is on iOS, everyone. Everyone I know has an iPad. Most have upgraded at least once.

Also Apple hardware support is the best EVER! if it breaks they fix it same day. If I drop it repairs are cheap, even from Apple. If I get sick of it or want to upgrade I can usually sell it for ridiculously close to new price.

Plus the iPad is a fantastic machine, the Surface RT so far is not. Microsoft has its work cut out for them in consumer tablets.

pthurrott
on Dec 6, 2012

Then you're not really even in the running for "the biggest Windows fanboi ever," sorry. :)

FinsUpDNC
on Dec 5, 2012

Is a Surface Pro a tablet? A Yoga or Twist a PC or Tablet? Acer S7? I think the worlds will soon collide...

Ted T.
on Dec 6, 2012

Does it come without a keyboard? It's a tablet.
Comes with an attached keyboard, or worse a non-detachable keyboard -- definitely not a tablet.

PM76
on Dec 6, 2012

I think Windows will have a lot more marketshare than that! Tablets and PC's are merging - its the desktop form factor that is in decline but laptops and tablets will continue to grow. The demand for touch screen PC's will sky rocket. When you look at it that way Windows will have a bigger market share in tablets/laptops. But MS need to crack the low end 7-8" devices, can't afford to be too late for this game too as Apple and Android have thier 7" form factor.

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