By Pauline Askin and Noel Randewich
SYDNEY/SAN FRANCISCO
(Reuters) – Consumers in Australia flocked to Apple Inc’s <AAPL.O>
store in Sydney on Friday to get the world’s first up-close look at the
tech giant’s smartwatch, which the company expects will be its next
runaway hit.
The Apple Watch, CEO Tim Cook’s first new major
product, was available for pre-order online and to try out in stores –
but not take home.
On April 24, consumers will be able to buy it
online or by reservation at retail locations including high-end fashion
boutiques in Paris, London and Tokyo, part of Apple’s strategy of
positioning the wearable computer as a must-have accessory.
On
Friday morning Apple’s Australian flagship store in Sydney’s financial
district was packed with those hoping to peek at the device, although
just around 20 die-hard fans queued out front, modest by the standards
of a major Apple launch.
Alexander Bock, a backpacker from
Germany, stood outside the shop’s towering glass facade. He hopes to
save enough money to buy the sports version of the watch, he said.
The
Apple Watch sport starts at $ 349 while the standard version comes in
at $ 549 in the U.S. High-end “Edition” watches with 18-karat gold
alloys are priced from $ 10,000 and go as high as $ 17,000.
“I
feel naked without a watch. I think I will buy the Apple watch with the
sports band … I’m working very hard right now so I can buy this watch,”
Bock told Reuters.
The watch marks the Cupertino, California company’s debut in a fledgling wearable technology market.
Based
on recent customer interest at its stores, Apple expects demand for the
watch, which allows users to check email, listen to music and make
phone calls when paired with an iPhone, to exceed availability at
launch, it said on Thursday.
Reviewers this week praised the
watch, which also helps users monitor their health and exercise, as
“beautiful” and “stylish” but gave it poor marks for relatively low
battery life and slow-loading apps.
For women, the various sizes
and wrist bands make this smartwatch more pleasing than earlier versions
from Samsung Electronics Co Ltd <005930.KS> and others, said
Kantar World Panel market analyst Carolina Milanesi, who has been
wearing the watch for a few days.
At the Apple Store in
Omotesando, a high-end shopping district in the heart of Tokyo, dozens
of shoppers huddled around two glass displays, snapping pictures of the
range of options available on the different watch models.
“I
actually tried it on briefly, and it’s so light it doesn’t feel like
it’s on my wrist,” 26-year-old salesman Yosuke Hosoi told Reuters.
NOT FOR EVERYONE
Sales
estimates for 2015 vary widely. Piper Jaffray predicts 8 million units
and Global Securities Research forecasts 40 million. By comparison,
Apple sold nearly 200 million iPhones last year.
“Is it for everybody? No, but I don’t think any wearables are yet,” Milanesi said.
Apple’s
watch is widely expected to outsell those by Samsung, Sony Corp
<6758.T> and Fitbit, that have attracted modest interest from
consumers. It will likely account for 55 percent of global smartwatch
shipments this year, according to Societe Generale.
Underscoring
its marketing strategy, Apple is selling the watch through a handful of
high-end stores including Selfridges in London, Galeries Lafayette in
Paris and Isetan in Tokyo.
Still, experts said Apple’s offering was unlikely to displace the market share of luxury-brand watch makers.
“This
is just Apple’s interpretation of the watch, I don’t think watch makers
should be worried at all,” Stephen Fenech, editor of the Tech Guide
website, told Reuters.
“This is just Apple’s expression where
they’ve combined what they are good at with the fact that it’s a watch
with style so I think there’s going to be room for everyone.”
JMP analyst Alex Gauna said he and others on Wall Street would be at stores this weekend to gauge consumer reaction.
But
the typically long queues at its stores on product launch days could be
a thing of the past as the company emphasizes online sales, according
to a leaked internal memo from retail chief Angela Ahrendts, reported by
Business Insider.
“The days of waiting in line and crossing fingers for a product are over for our customers,” she wrote.
“This
is a significant change in mindset, and we need your help to make it
happen. Tell your customers we have more availability online, and show
them how easy it is to order.”
A spokesman for Apple in Sydney declined to comment on the memo, citing company policy.
At
an Apple Store in Hong Kong there was no queue, although half a dozen
customers gathered near the shop door, cheering when it was opened.
Demos were by online registration, after which a Reuters reporter
received a demo without having to wait.
“I didn’t know it’s the
first day. I am here to buy an iPad,” said a 26-year-old customer who
gave her name only as Ms Jian, visiting from China’s Chongqing. “I will
take a look at the watch later.”
Apple shares closed 0.76 percent higher at $ 126.56 on Thursday.
(Writing
by Matt Siegel in SYDNEY; Additional reporting by Devika Krishna Kumar
in Bengaluru and Teppei Kasai in Tokyo; Editing by Bernard Orr, Dean
Yates and Christopher Cushing)
Brought to you by www.srnnews.com
SRN News » Business
No comments:
Post a Comment