The Peterborough Examiner

Apple’s HomePod disappoint­s with slow sales

Though preorders were strong, units are starting to pile up

- MARK GURMAN Bloomberg

When Apple’s HomePod smart speaker went on sale in January, it entered a market pioneered and dominated by Amazon’s Echo lineup of Alexa-powered devices. Apple has been touting the HomePod’s superior sound quality, but so far hasn’t enticed many consumers to part with $349.

By late March, Apple had lowered sales forecasts and cut some orders with Inventec Corp., one of the manufactur­ers that builds the HomePod for Apple, according to a person familiar with the matter.

At first, it looked like the HomePod might be a hit. Preorders were strong, and in the last week of January the device grabbed about a third of the U.S. smart speaker market in unit sales, according to data provided to Bloomberg by Slice Intelligen­ce. But by the time HomePods arrived in stores, sales were tanking, says Slice principal analyst Ken Cassar. “Even when people had the ability to hear these things,” he says, “it still didn’t give Apple another spike.”

During the HomePod’s first 10 weeks of sales, it eked out 10 per cent of the smart speaker market, compared with 73 per cent for Amazon’s Echo devices and 14 per cent for the Google Home, according to Slice Intelligen­ce. Three weeks after the launch, weekly HomePod sales slipped to about four per cent of the smart speaker category on average. Inventory is piling up, according to Apple store workers. Apple declined to comment.

Apple had an opportunit­y to put the HomePod at the centre of a new ecosystem of smart home and other gadgets that aren’t glued to the iPhone. But the small, wireless speaker is not that product. Though the HomePod delivers market-leading audio quality, consumers have discovered it’s heavily dependent on the iPhone and is limited as a digital assistant.

Veteran Apple analyst Shannon Cross says consumers assumed the HomePod would be able to do many of the things the Echo and Google Home can do — answering questions, ordering pizzas and much more. Instead, the HomePod is mostly limited to playing tunes from Apple Music, controllin­g a limited number of Apple-optimized smart home appliances and sending messages through an iPhone. That’s a serious disincenti­ve, Cross says, when the Apple speaker costs $200 more than most smart speakers.

The HomePod will almost certainly improve. Not every Apple product was a hit out of the gate. The Apple Watch faced challenges when it launched, too, and is now widely recognized as the top performing smartwatch on the market.

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