Most smartphone users plan OS switch

Michael Carroll
01 Dec 2010
00:00

Three quarters of smartphone owners plan to switch operating systems when they next upgrade their device, research by GfK shows.

Surveys conducted during October and November found that just 25% of current smartphone owners will stick with their current software when upgrading, compared to 56% who said they would keep their options open.

Apple users were the most loyal, with 59% planning to stick with the iPhone when they buy their next device. BlackBerry users were next on 35%, followed by Android customers (28%), Nokia’s Symbian (24%) and Windows Mobile (21%).

The final figure could change if Microsoft’s latest Windows Phone 7 software proves a hit.

GfK tips Nokia to fare better in 2011, noting that major upgrades to the Symbian ^3 platform and release of devices based on MeeGo will boost the vendor’s position. RIM should also improve next year, due to its recently launched OS6 and the pending launch of its PlayBook tablet.

The research firm said the numbers show that consumers now focus more on user experience than hardware – the deciding factor until the past three years – and said the mobile ecosystem will be “vital to attracting the next wave of smartphone users.”

GfK quizzed 2,653 smartphone users in China, Germany, Brazil, the UK, US and Spain.

Separate research by IDC predicts that the Android OS will become number one in Europe in 2011, Bloomberg reported. The Google-backed OS has already conquered the US market.

MORE ARTICLES ON: GfK, IDC, Smartphones

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