When it comes to tablets, Apple defined the category with its iPad.
Visit an electronics store and you’ll find plenty of similar looking
competitors, yet with as many as 60 million iPads sold, you might not
know any competition existed. With tablets becoming increasingly common
at work, can anyone compete with Apple’s iPad as a business tablet?
Tablets for Business
IDG Connect, a technology media firm (and subsidiary of PCWorld's parent company), conducted an iPad for Business survey
to find out how IT and business professionals around the world how they
use their iPads.
Nearly everyone responded that they use it for
reading, with over 70 percent globally saying they are buying fewer
physical books and newspapers as a result. A majority also say they use
it for Web browsing. This isn’t so surprising since tablets make a great
content consumption tool.
What’s more interesting is that 57 percent of U.S. users surveyed
said they are carrying their laptop less, partially or completely
replacing it with the iPad. Over half of the U.S. respondents said they
use their iPad for communication, and 43 percent even said they use
their iPad for tasks they would have otherwise used a smartphone to
complete. This emphasizes that tablets aren’t just a reading tool, but
also a communications tool, which may be why 79 percent of those
surveyed “always” use their iPad on the road.
iPads Dominate
IDG Connect’s data was collected from iPad users, but with competing
tablets having similar--and in many cases, nearly
identical--functionality, it shouldn’t be a stretch to conclude that
tablets in general make great reading and communications tools for
business, and that competing products are just as desirable. The
numbers, however, don’t support this.
A November 2010 survey of 1,641 businesses conducted by ChangeWave
showed that, at the time, iPads made up 82 percent of business tablet
purchases, and that 78 percent of respondents planned to purchase iPads.
: TThe recent IDG Connect survey results were similar, despite the
explosion of iPad competitors in the past year: It found that 85% of
U.S. buyers would stick with Apple’s iPad for future tablet purchases.
Can iPad Be Toppled?
Apple got there first, and apparently did it right as well. While
some might think the iPad is all about hype, with Apple’s commercials
and product placements influencing buyers, the IDG Connect survey found
that 58 percent of U.S. business buyers based their decision on
functionality. With Apple continuing to improve its product, and the iPad 3 rumored to have a faster processor and higher resolution screen, what can the competition do to break into business?
If buyers are basing their decisions on functionality, then the
competition needs to provide functionality that Apple isn’t offering.
Manufacturers like RIM have tried smaller, more portable models, though
the rumored announcement of an upcoming 10 inch model seems to confirm
it wasn’t a success. Another approach is to add a keyboard to the
tablet, making it easier to create content. Asus’s Transformer Prime offers this feature in the form of a keyboard/trackpad dock, though it’s still to early to see if it’s a hit with businesses.
If manufacturers can’t beat Apple with features, then they’ll need
to do it based on price. Functionality is important, but it’s always
balanced against cost, and lower cost offerings like Amazon’s Kindle Fire
can make it much harder to justify the added expense a superior product
may bring. Eventually someone will find a way to come close to the iPad
on functionality, yet keep the costs lower than Apple’s, which is when
we could see a new king of tablets for business.
By Joseph Fieber, PCWorld
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