Verizon iPhone's Impact on Google's Android: How Bad?
Google's Android faces a formidable threat in the Verizon iPhone.
Jan. 16, 2011— -- Over the last two years, Google's Android mobile operating system has surged out of nowhere to take a significant chunk of the smartphone market, anywhere from 15 to 25 percent, depending on whose numbers you use.
Now, with Verizon Wireless's announcement that it will begin offering Apple's iPhone, Android faces a new and formidable competitive threat.
The reason? Verizon has been a crucial partner for Google in the Android rollout. The wireless giant poured money into marketing Motorola's Droid and other Android-based smartphones, including $100 million on the successful "Droid Does" campaign.
And because Verizon didn't offer the iPhone, there was a void in the company's product portfolio — a void that Google happily filled with Android.
"A lot of people who bought Android phones were buying it in lieu of an iPhone, because they couldn't get one on the Verizon network," Needham & Co. analyst Charlie Wolf told Ars Technica. "Where the iPhone will have a dramatic impact is on the brand choices of feature phone users migrating to smartphones going forward. The iPhone will suck the wind out of Android's growth on Verizon."
That may be overstating the impact slightly, but it's pretty clear that many, many Verizon customers will opt for an iPhone instead of an Android device. The question is, how many, and will it be enough to halt Android's seemingly inexorable growth?
"We believe iPhone on Verizon will be the first true test for Android, whether its share gains are real or just a temporary phenomenon due to weak competition," Shaw Wu, an analyst at Kaufman Bros., wrote in a research note cited by Bloomberg. He said he expects Verizon to put major "marketing muscle" behind the iPhone, most likely at the expense of the Droid Does campaign.
But Wu cautioned that it's very difficult to predict the Verizon's iPhone's impact on Android in a quantifiable way.
The reason is that Android is such a diversified platform. Every major wireless provider offers Android devices, and there are literally dozens of Android-based phones, from all the major handset-makers. Moreover, Android adoption is occurring at a rapid rate, an astonishing 300,000 handset activations per day, according to Google's Android chief Andy Rubin.