Tag Archive for Sales

PC Sales Post First Quarterly Gain In Two Years

PC Sales Post First Quarterly Gain In Two YearsPC sales increased for the first time in two years. Gartner is reporting that global PC shipments for the fourth quarter of 2023 totaled 63.3 million units in. This is a 0.3% increase from the fourth quarter of 2022. However, 2023 was the worst year in PC history. PC shipments declined 14.8% in 2023. Gartner notes this is the second year with a double-digit decline. Worldwide PC shipments totaled 241.8 million units in 2023, down from 284 million in 2022.

Company2023 Shipments2023 Market Share (%)2022 Shipments2022 Market Share (%)2023-2022 Growth (%)
Lenovo59,725.024.7%69,047.024.3%-13.5%
HP Inc.52,896.021.9%55,366.019.5%-4.5%
Dell40,238.016.6%50,008.017.6%-19.5%
Apple21,877.09.0%26,825.09.4%-18.4%
Asus17,061.07.1%20,651.07.3%-17.4%
Acer15,887.06.6%18,708.06.6%-15.1%
Others34,206.014.1%43,448.015.3%-21.3%
Total241,891.00284,052.00-14.8%
Source: Gartner (January 2024)

PC shipments for all of 202 3fell 14.8% decrease from 2022.Globally, PC shipments for all of 2023 totaled 241.8 million units, a 14.8% decrease from 2022. This marks the first time that shipment volume has dipped below 250 million since 2006, when 230 million units were shipped according to Gartner.

All the vendors shipped fewer units in 2023. According to the Gartner data date, Dell (DELL) (-19.5%) and Apple (AAPL) (-18.4%) saw the largest decreases. Mikako Kitagawa, Director Analyst at Gartner said, “…  all top six vendors maintained their position without notable share gains or losses … Gartner projects that the PC market will return to annual growth in 2024.”

U.S. PC sales

U.S. PC market increased 1.8%The U.S. PC market recorded its first year-over-year growth since the second quarter of 2021. U.S. PC sales increased 1.8% in the fourth quarter of 2023. HP (HPQ) maintained the top spot in the U.S. PC market share of 27.7%. Dell came in second with 22.6% of U.S. PC market share, despite a 5% decrease for last year. ASUS (2357) lost a spectacular 23.2% of their U.S. Market Share in 23Q4. Kitagawa commented, “The solid U.S. economy helped small and midsize business spending as the segment grew steadily. Large companies were still cautious about spending, postponing PC refreshes to 2024.”

U.S. PC Vendor Unit Shipment Estimates for 4Q23 (Thousands of Units)
Company4Q23 Shipments4Q23 Market Share (%)4Q23-4Q22 Growth (%)
HP Inc.4,66527.70%1.80%
Dell3,80522.60%-5.0%
Apple2,71616.10%14.50%
Lenovo2,65015.70%10.60%
Acer8264.90%13.20%
ASUS7334.40%-23.10%
Others1,4358.50%-12.00%
Total16,8311001.80%
Source: Gartner (January 2024)

Global PC Sales

Globally, year-over-year PC shipments were mixed.Globally, year-over-year PC shipments were mixed. The winner was Acer (TPE:2353) with an increase of 11.1% for the year. Apple, (7.2%) best, followed by HP (5.6%) and Lenovo (LNVGY) (3.2%)  were the winners for 2023.

ASUS was the big loser in 2023, with a -9.4% decrease year-over-year in PC shipments. Dell dropped -8.3% over 2023.

Worldwide PC Vendor Unit Shipment Estimates for 4Q23 (Thousands of Units)
Company4Q23 Shipments4Q23 Market Share (%)4Q23-4Q22 (%) Growth
Lenovo16,21325.60%3.2%
HP Inc.13,95422.00%5.6%
Dell9,98315.80%-8.3%
Apple6,34910.00%7.2%
ASUS4,4057.00%-9.4%
Acer3,9876.30%11.1%
Others8,47913.40%15.3%
Total63,371
Source: Gartner (January 2024)


Gartner notes that Lenovo marked its first year-over-year growth in worldwide PC shipments since the third quarter of 2021. HP Inc. had its second consecutive quarter of year-over-year growth and sequential growth in worldwide PC shipments. Meanwhile, Dell registered its seventh consecutive quarter of year-over-year shipment decline.

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PC sales should pick up as many firms upgrade to Windows 11 ahead of the looming Windows 10 EOL. The scheduled end of support date for Window 10 is October 2025

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Tablet Trouble

Tablet TroubleThere has been a shocking long-term trend in Apple (AAPL) iPad tablet sales. Despite the much bally hoed launch of the new iPad Air 2 and iPad mini 3, sales of Apple’s iPad have sunk to their lowest level since the 2011 introduction of the iDevice.This chart from Business Insider shows the decline of iPad sales.

Apple CEO Tim Cook was unfazed about the iPad’s plunging sales. During Apple’s latest earnings call Apple’s Cook said, “I’m very bullish on where we can take iPad over time.”Apple Quarterly Revenue

Users don’t want a tablet

Despite CEO Cook’s optimism, research from Kantar Worldpanel Comtech is not so sure. In an analysis of the tablet market, they found that consumers believe that they need the latest iPad. Or any tablet for that matter.

Their conclusion is based on research which found:

  • A majority of U.S. non-tablet owners said they would not buy a tablet in the next 12 months.
  • Of those who will not buy a tablet, 725 said that their PC or laptop was “good enough” as the reason why they are not buying a tablet in the next year.
  • Tablets are not seen as an alternative to smartphones.

Carolina Milanesi, chief of research at Kantar Worldpanel laid out four reasons why tablets sales are not growing at the rate many had expected.

  1. current tablet owners plan to keep their tablets even after upgrading to a new oneReplacement cycles are longer for tablets than smartphones. Ms. Milanesi explains,”Software upgrades help refresh the devices, and carriers do not provide incentives/subsidies to encourage replacements every two years, as they do with smartphones.
  2. Tablets are not as personal as smartphones.While there is no question that tablets are more personal than PCs, if less personal than smartphones, they still land in between the two,” the Kantar chief of research says.
  3. Tablet owners hang on to their old tablet when they get a new one. Smartphone users tend to turn in their old smartphone when they upgrade to a newer one according to Kantar Worldpanel data:
    • 36% of current tablet owners plan to keep their tablets even after upgrading to a new one.
    • 18% plan to pass their old ones on to a friend or relative, according to Kantar Worldpanel data.
  4. Finally, the value proposition of tablets remains weak.They report that only 3% of U.S. non-tablet owners said they will definitely buy a tablet in the next 12 months.

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I thought that tablets were going to take over the world.

So what is the use case for tablets?

If the Apple fanboyz and gurls aren’t buying new iPads why should anyone else?

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

4 Tips for Dealing with IT Sales People

Tips for Dealing with IT Sales PeopleJonathan Feldman penned an article for InformationWeek which provided some tips on how to deal with vendor sales people. The Ashville NC, CIO writes that most IT pros think doing calls and meetings with vendors are a waste of time. However, he states that IT vendor salespeople have a place in the IT ecosystem. The author argues salespeople can be a benefit;

… if you stick your head in the sand, stick your head in the sanddon’t be surprised when you fail to move forward … We all know the bad side of sales. But the good side, at the correct time and in the correct dosage, can usher in business technology innovation.

The article explains it’s all about sound vendor management. Mr. Feldman describes four things he does to ensure that time with the vendor is as productive as possible for him.

Establish guidelines for sales people

TEstablish guidelineshere should be a process for vendor meetings. Mr. Feldman says that staff should know what to do when faced with a vendor on the phone, or worse yet (which I’ve seen) at the front desk.

  1. Should they take the call immediately?
  2. Pass it to someone else? If so, to whom?
  3. If it’s decided not to engage the vendor at all, based on what criteria?

Any way you slice it, staff need guidance so that they don’t go overboard one way or another.

Set expectations

Set expectationsProvide vendors a mechanism for contacting you. CIO Feldman suggests the website should clearly state where product and service calls should go. He also suggests that voice mail announcements spell out a number that vendors should call if they want assistance.

This is an early test of vendors if they can follow your directions. If they can’t properly get in touch at the beginning, how are they going to behave at crunch time? rb- I use the same logic at RFP time, vendors certainly raise a flag if they don’t read the directions and respond in the requested format.

Direct the call

Limit cold callsIt is your time, do you want to spend it on a cold call? I have found that cold calls are rarely useful. Mr. Feldman suggests you limit cold calls to five minutes, tops. He makes the vendor get right to the elevator pitch to quickly check whether to hear more at another time. To cut through the chaff, he recommends a question like, “What’s the value in what you’re selling, in 30 seconds or less?” Hang up on people who say they’re not selling anything.

Control timing

If the salesperson has followed the process and made an appointment and showed up (rb- a problem for first time calls or small accounts) keep the meeting short. The author says these early meetings should be less than 30 minutes to hear and evaluate their message. These calls are to evaluate the elevator pitch, not to discuss strategy. Control the timing; don’t let it control you.

Evaluate the elevator pitchMr. Feldman concludes that ignoring sales calls isn’t an option unless you want to join the legions of the uninformed. He recommends that IT Pros sift through the sales noise to decide which pitches merit action to benefit your business.

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I have managed the vendor pitch process by having quarterly pitch Fridays where new vendors could get 30 minutes to pitch their business. This allowed us to schedule the meetings around our customer’s work. And it made it easy for the admin staff to schedule, here is your time like or lump it. And it pushed the meeting out enough to test sales commitment.

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.