The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Why Amazon keeps making tablets with low demand

- By Hayley Tsukayama

ACCORDING to the Consumer Technology Associatio­n, sales of tablets will drop 12 per cent this year and revenue for those sales will drop 13 per cent.

The main bright spot in the market has been high-end laptop replacemen­ts, such as the Microsoft Surface or iPad Pro, with detachable keyboards.

The familiar slate design has all but gone to collect dust in many minds.

That is, except at Amazon.com. There, tablet sales seem to be growing, and the products remain an integral part of the company’s strategies for selling its goods and services to consumers.

Amazon ended 2017 as the world’s second-largest tablet maker, behind Apple, having overtaken Samsung during the holiday season, according to Internatio­nal Data Corp., which tracks tablet shipments.

Last week, the online retail giant released a new version, the Fire HD 10 Kids Edition, a durable 10-inch tablet aimed at children for US$200 (RM800).

Amazon doesn’t release sales figures, but analysts at IDC said that last year the company’s tablet business grew 50 per cent in the holiday quarter.

One likely reason behind Amazon’s success is that its tablets are inexpensiv­e.

A basic iPad will cost you US$329 (RM1,316); Amazon’s highest-end tablet comes in at US$150. Those prices are so relatively low that it may be easier to justify buying one to watch YouTube videos in the kitchen or to hand to the kids as a gadget of their own before buying them something pricier. Amazon is essentiall­y the only major manufactur­er going for the cheap end of the market right now, and it tends to push tablets with big discounts in the last half of the year, first with its Prime Day shopping holiday in July and then into the holiday season.

“They’re essentiall­y giving these devices away for half of the year,” said Lauren Guenveur, analyst for IDC.

But a relatively cheap price doesn’t sell a device all on its own. Amazon has also doubled down on pushing tablets as an entertainm­ent experience. Take Show Mode, for example. The feature allows you to watch content on your tablet on an ideal screen. “If you look at the usage on tablets, they’re essentiall­y a television replacemen­t,” Guenveur said.

Tablets also provide an alternativ­e to dedicated Alexa devices, such as the Echo, she said. The Fire HD tablets now have Alexa voice control, allowing you to interact with them as you would with the Echo or Dot. That means that Amazon has found a way to make Alexa, and therefore your connection to Amazon, mobile. And that mobility is key, since Amazon doesn’t offer a smartphone, as do its main voice assistant rivals, Apple and Google.

In an interview with The Washington Post, Allen Hughes, Amazon’s director of sales and marketing for Fire tablets, noted that customers who’ve bought any of the many other Alexa products - Echo, Show, Look, Spot, Dot - have to set up the devices in a static spot. “Now,” he said, “you can move from room to room” with your tablet and set up Show Mode docks around the house to take you from couch to nightstand without missing a beat. — Washington Post.

 ??  ?? (Left) The Fire HD 10 Kids Edition from Amazon is the latest in its line of kid-focused tablets. • (Right) Amazon’s Show Mode Dock allows its tablets to become more like small television­s. — Photos courtesy of Amazon
(Left) The Fire HD 10 Kids Edition from Amazon is the latest in its line of kid-focused tablets. • (Right) Amazon’s Show Mode Dock allows its tablets to become more like small television­s. — Photos courtesy of Amazon

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