Gartner: Android dominates smartphone sales worldwide

Gartner's first-quarter numbers say Android accounts for 36 per cent of sales

Another day, another report saying Android rules the smartphone world, this time from Gartner.

Gartner's first-quarter numbers say Android leads in worldwide smartphone market share, accounting for 36 per cent of sales. Nokia slipped to second place with 27.4 per cent market share, followed by Apple's iOS in third place with 16.8 per cent. Research in Motion's BlackBerry and Microsoft's Windows phones round out the top five with 12.9 per cent and 3.6 per cent, respectively.

Here are a few takeaways from Gartner's smartphone report:

Everyone Wins (Almost)

Often lost in the market share horse race coverage is the fact that nearly all smartphone platforms are growing, and fast. Symbian lost market share year-over-year, but sales grew by nearly 15 per cent. iOS only gained 1.5 per cent market share year-over-year, but unit sales more than doubled. On the whole, Gartner says smartphone sales grew 85 per cent compared with the first quarter of 2010, now accounting 23.6 per cent of overall phone sales.

The only losing mobile platform? Windows phones, whose unit sales fell by about one per cent as Microsoft tries to transition from its old Windows Mobile to the new Windows Phone 7. Gartner doesn't list WebOS individually.

Beware 'Other' Androids

While Android seems to be making huge gains, the real smartphone explosion is coming from what Gartner calls "other" manufacturers, whose collective unit sales grew by 48.5 million year-over-year. No other smartphone maker has seen growth like that. In fact, several vendors that have embraced Android have seen their total year-over-year sales fall, including LG, Motorola and Sony Ericsson, as their businesses transition to smartphones. We can assume that a large portion of worldwide Android growth comes from the "other" category, consisting of brands you've never heard of in emerging markets.

That said, there are plenty of studies and surveys showing Android's ascent in the United States, where big brands reign.

HTC and Samsung All the Way

Not every phone maker is reaping the rewards of Android, but Samsung and HTC appear to be cleaning up. Samsung saw six per cent year-over-year growth in phone sales -- an increase of 3.9 million units -- and HTC exploded by 176 per cent, with about 5.9 million more phone sales than the first quarter of 2010. This should be no surprise; out of PCWorld's list of top 10 smartphones, HTC and Samsung each make three.

Don't Forget to Profit

Tempting as it may be to count Apple out of the smartphone race, keep in mind that market share isn't everything. A recent report from Asymco found that despite the Apple's small sliver of the smartphone market, the iPhone accounts for 55 per cent of all smartphone profits.

Follow Jared on Facebook and Twitter for even more tech news and commentary.

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