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To: soup who wrote (12272)4/28/1998 10:08:00 AM
From: IanBruce  Respond to of 213186
 
Apple shows market share gains

Here's the entire article.

By Jim Davis
Staff Writer, CNET NEWS.COM
April 27, 1998, 5:15 p.m. PT
<http://www.news.com/News/Item/0,4,21540,00.html>

Apple Computer's fortunes are looking up in 1998.

Not only has the Mac maker posted its second profitable quarter in a row,
but also it has reversed a downward slide in its market share, according
to new data from International Data Corporation. The good news comes in
a quarter when Apple typically does not do so well.

The company grew its market share in the United States to 4 percent in the
first quarter of 1998, up from 3.4 percent in the fourth quarter of 1997. It
was the first sign of sequential growth since the second quarter of 1997.

The gains are based on continuing strong sales of the Power Macintosh G3
systems in conjunction with a slowing rate of growth seen by vendors such as
Compaq Computer. The first calendar quarter is not normally a strong one for
Apple.

More importantly, the flat growth on a year-to-year basis was actually a
victory of sorts, as Apple has lost market share each quarter on an
annualized basis since the third quarter of 1994. Year-on-year growth is
generally considered the most important measure of sales since seasonal
effects on sales are accounted for.

"They've shown stability from a sales aspect as well as financial
stability," said Kevin Hause, an analyst with IDC. "The focus is less on
simply surviving and more on long-term directions and strategies. This was a
long time in coming," he noted.

The upturn in Apple's fortunes, although modest, halts a long string of
market share losses. As of January, the company's own numbers showed that in
the fiscal fourth quarter of 1997, its share in the U.S. market fell to 4.3
percent from 6.6 percent the year before, according to filings with the
Securities and Exchange Commission. At about the same time last year, Apple
was knocked off the list of top-five worldwide PC vendors for the first time
in several years, according to marker research firm Dataquest.

Analysts caution that the company still has to regain the attention of
developers now that it has shown it can regain customers. The recent
decision by Intuit to drop development of a new version of its popular
Quicken financial planning software typifies the issues Apple must strive to
rectify.

"Whatever the reasoning behind it, the Intuit [announcement] was not taken
well by Apple watchers and the Mac community. Just the perception that a
company like that would drop Mac support was a major issue," Hause said.
"Unless the Mac community as whole is a growing and robust market, then
software developers are going to be offering less and less support for that
community."

Sustained market share increases and profitable quarters would go a long way
in convincing developers to increase their development efforts.

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