The Swiss watch industry has responded to the onset of connected devices by launching its own versions of them. But are smartwatches and wearables a real threat?
The Apple Watch 2 was launched in September this year. In 2015, when Apple launched the first version, it not only created a new product, but also provided consumers with a new product category
You could call Sameer Hiremath an Apple aficionado. The 42-year-old joint managing director and president of Hikal, a specialty chemicals and pharmaceuticals firm (part of the Kalyani Group), can’t wait to get his hands on the next product the company launches. So, in April 2015, when the much-awaited iOS-integrated system Apple Watch was launched, Hiremath was obviously in queue.
“I already owned several other products like the iPad and the iPhone. I had moved to the light side from the dark,” he says. So Hiremath bought a 42-mm Apple Watch from New York, thinking it would be helpful for gym workouts, with its all-day activity tracker, heartbeat sensor, a workout app, calorie counter, and a weekly move goal summary.
But the watch came with more. For instance, it allowed him to store and play music—there was no need to carry an iPod anymore. “[The watch] has also become my phone at corporate meetings,” he adds. “It is obviously impolite to keep looking at your smartphone during meetings or presentations… I can view and respond to SMSes and WhatsApp messages [on my watch] at once.”
For Hiremath, who owns other luxury watches from Jaeger-LeCoultre, Panerai and Omega, the Apple Watch is now a daily accessory. “In fact, the incentive to buy a new watch has gone down,” he admits.
According to UK-based Juniper Research, an analyst firm specialising in mobile and digital technology companies, Apple dominates the global smartwatch market, accounting for 52 percent of all devices shipped in 2015, and it is likely to dominate this segment for several more years. “Apple has such a large share that it would take a huge decline in sales specifically affecting Apple, rather than the whole smartwatch market, for another player to overtake,” says James Moar, senior analyst at Juniper Research. “Although there are many cheaper brands out there, no one has enough of a market advantage to overtake Apple.”
(This story appears in the Nov-Dec 2016 issue of ForbesLife India. To visit our Archives, click here.)