Products

EMARKETER delivers leading-edge research to clients in a variety of forms, including full-length reports and data visualizations to equip you with actionable takeaways for better business decisions.
PRO+
New data sets, deeper insights, and flexible data visualizations.
Learn More
Reports
In-depth analysis, benchmarks and shorter spotlights on digital trends.
Learn More
Forecasts
Interactive projections with 10k+ metrics on market trends, & consumer behavior.
Learn More
Charts
Proprietary data and over 3,000 third-party sources about the most important topics.
Learn More
Industry KPIs
Industry benchmarks for the most important KPIs in digital marketing, advertising, retail and ecommerce.
Learn More
Briefings
Client-only email newsletters with analysis and takeaways from the daily news.
Learn More
Analyst Access Program
Exclusive time with the thought leaders who craft our research.
Learn More

About EMARKETER

Our goal is to unlock digital opportunities for our clients with the world’s most trusted forecasts, analysis, and benchmarks. Spanning five core coverage areas and dozens of industries, our research on digital transformation is exhaustive.
Our Story
Learn more about our mission and how EMARKETER came to be.
Learn More
Methodology
Rigorous proprietary data vetting strips biases and produces superior insights.
Learn More
Our People
Take a look into our corporate culture and view our open roles.
Join the Team
Contact Us
Speak to a member of our team to learn more about EMARKETER.
Contact Us
Newsroom
See our latest press releases, news articles or download our press kit.
Learn More
Advertising & Sponsorship Opportunities
Reach an engaged audience of decision-makers.
Learn More
Events
Browse our upcoming and past events, recent podcasts, and other featured resources.
Learn More
Podcasts
Tune in to EMARKETER's daily, weekly, and monthly podcasts.
Learn More

A supply chain crunch didn’t stop Apple from dominating the wearables market in Q4

The news: The global wearables market hit a record number of shipments in Q4’21 at 171 million units, up nearly 11% from the year prior, per new IDC data.

How we got here: Consumer demand was driven primarily by interest in health and fitness tracking products, and Apple dominated the wearables market yet again.

  • Apple recorded nearly 60 million shipments of its wearables, far ahead of Xiaomi, which ranked second with 14.6 million units, per IDC data.
  • Samsung maintained its third-place rank, shipping 13.6 million wearables during the same time period.
  • Notably, Google’s Fitbit didn’t make IDC’s top 5 list this year, which likely means it had less than 9.2 million shipments (the amount of wearables Imagine Marketing shipped, earning it the 5th spot in the list).

Supply chain crisis averted: Tech companies experienced less supply chain barriers in Q4 2021 than in earlier quarters of the year, which enabled Apple to get more wearables to health consumers.

We initially thought the supply chain crisis presented an opportunity for competitors like Samsung to overtake Apple in the smartwatch market. Now it appears some supply chain problems are dissipating—which actually helped Apple retain its top spot in the market.

  • That’s because Apple was able to get more of its Watches online and in-store for consumers to purchase.
  • While the “supply has been a constant battle for many companies during 2021, many of the issues began to subside [in Q4’21] and allowed brands to ship record volumes while broadening their product lines,” according to IDC.

What’s next for smartwatch vendors lagging behind Apple? Healthcare consumers are worried about privacy—a factor Apple competitors could take into account more this year to prop up the value of their wearables in the eyes of potential customers.

It’s no secret that Apple has presented a hard stance on privacy over the last year. It has been heavily marketing a commitment to privacy in combination with AppTrackingTransparency, for instance. That could be a key reason why consumers are flocking to its wearables rather than competitors’ like Samsung.

  • About 39% of health consumers say the biggest drawback of wearables are their security vulnerabilities with sensitive health data, per a recent survey by Software Advice Research.

In fact, Samsung has already begun a plan to make more healthcare consumers comfortable with the security of its tech, including wearables.

  • The company recently revealed a new “Privacy Dashboard” on its devices, which lets users see which apps have permission to access users’ data, per The Verge.
  • We could see Google implement new privacy safeguards for its Fitbit devices sometime soon, too—particularly since some regulators raised privacy concerns as Google completed its acquisition of Fitbit last year.