Gartner Claims 2011 Will See Slow PC Unit Growth

PC growth will be supported by healthy professional replacements over the next 18 months, the report says

Worldwide PC unit growth is projected to be slightly weaker in 2011 than the previous projection, according to IT research firm Gartner’s latest forecast. PC shipments are expected to grow 9.3 percent in 2011, reaching 385 million units, slightly lower than Gartner’s previous projection of 10.5 percent growth for this year.

The report noted that throughout much of the last decade, PC unit growth was powered by consumers and, with consumers from mature markets maintaining a tight rein on their spending in response to continuing economic uncertainty, along with a lack of compelling reasons for consumers in general to replace their PCs, unit growth has slowed and must once again rely on businesses to drive it.

Tablet Effect Is Temporary

“Consumer mobile PCs are no longer driving growth, because of sharply declining consumer interest in mini-notebooks. Mini-notebook shipments have noticeably contracted over the last several quarters, and this has substantially reduced overall mobile PC unit growth,” said Ranjit Atwal, research director at Gartner.

Media tablets, such as the iPad, have also impacted mobile growth, but more because they have caused consumers to delay new mobile PC purchases rather than directly replacing aging mobile PCs with media tablets. We believe direct substitution of media tablets for mobile PCs will be minimal,” he added.

PCs are transitioning from a one-size-fits-all computing platform to a more-specialised device, prized for its ability to complement other devices.

“The PC market is experiencing dramatic structural changes,” said Atwal. “Moving forward, PCs will no longer be a market by themselves, but part of a larger device market that ranges from smart televisions to the most-basic-feature phones. Within this market, consumers and professionals will increasingly use the combination of devices that best suits their particular needs.”

“Businesses sharply reduced replacements and extended PC lifetimes in response to the recession,” said Raphael Vasquez, research analyst at Gartner. “Businesses have begun replacing aging PCs more vigorously. We expect the growing urgency for businesses to migrate away from Windows XP will drive significant professional replacements.”

Gartner also reduced expected 2011 Japanese PC unit growth to 2.4 percent in response to the March earthquake and tsunami. “Desk-based PC shipment growth has been significantly affected and business continuity plans are accelerating the shift to mobile PCs and alternate computing models,” said George Shiffler, research director at Gartner. “However, the impact of Japan’s twin disasters on worldwide PC shipment growth has been minor, and PC vendors have so far managed the threat of Japanese component disruptions.”

According to the International Data Corporation (IDC) Worldwide Quarterly PC Tracker, worldwide PC shipments are now expected to grow by just 4.2 percent in 2011, down from a February forecast of 7.1 percent. A combination of declining first-quarter shipments, an increasingly conservative economic outlook, relative saturation among developed market consumers and competing products will lead to slow growth in 2011 before a rebound in 2012, the company’s report noted. For 2012 through 2015, growth is still expected to fall in the 10 percent to 11 percent range.