We’re reaching the saturation point on smartphones, demand for tablets and TVs has turned sluggish, and people have grown concerned that connected devices (the so-called “Internet of Things”) may lay bare their personal data.
Those are the findings of a global survey of 28,000 consumers in 28 countries by management consulting company Accenture, and they paint a grim picture of the mobile market which the company says will continue throughout 2016.
“The slowdown in the consumer technology market is irrefutable, serious, and global,” Sami Luukkonen said in a prepared statement. Luukkonen is the global managing director for the company’s Electronics and High Tech group.
“The market is not about glitzy gadgets any more … As device demand tapers off, the industry needs to make a sharp turn toward providing innovative, value-added services that consumers are able to use with confidence.”
That last factor — confidence — is important in a vulnerable market, the company said.
Security and privacy
Nearly half of the survey’s respondents (47%) said security concerns and privacy risks rank among the top three things keeping them from buying IoT devices and services including smart watches, fitness monitors, and smart home thermostats.
Even those who choose to buy the devices say they’re taking a risk. More than two-thirds (69%) say they know the products are capable of being hacked.
Among those who either own an IoT device or plan to buy one this year, more than a third (37%) decided they’re going to be more cautious in how they use them. Almost a quarter (24%) chose to postpone buying one as a result. Nearly a fifth (18%) said they stopped using their IoT devices because of security concerns.
Flat market
As a result, Accenture said, the IoT market is largely flat. Just 13% of those polled said they planned to buy a smartwatch this year, an increase of just 1 percentage point from last year. Demand for a host of other gadgets also stalled; about 9% of respondents said they planned to buy fitness monitors or other health devices, thermostats, or connected surveillance cameras, about the same as last year.
“Despite all its promise, the Internet of Things market has revealed itself to be a double-edged sword,” Luukkonen said. “The market opportunity is enormous, but security and ease-of-use concerns are hindering its near- and long-term potential.”
IoT devices aren’t the only ones stagnating, the survey said. Less than half of survey takers (48%) said they plan to buy a smartphone this year, down six points from last. Less than a third said they planned to buy a TV or tablet PC (30% and 29%, respectively). Those numbers were both 38% last year.
This article was written by Heather Newman and first appeared on VentureBeat.
Featured image via charnsitr / Shutterstock.com