Wearable Computer Market Will Grow 38 Percent in 2015

In a recent interview, Annette Zimmermann, research director at technology research company Gartner, shared her outlook for the wearable computer market in 2015 and beyond. 

She said that Gartner foresess “strong growth” in wearables this year, with smartwatches, fitness bands and other trackers selling nearly 70 million units — up 38 percent from 2014. She added, “While the wearables market is currently a relatively low penetrated market, it has the opportunity to grow in double digits in the long term.” Accordingly, Gartner forecasts sales of wearables to reach 514 million units in 2020. 

Zimmerman said that the Apple Watch (due to be released in April) is bound to raise awareness for wearables, and “Samsung, Sony, Lenovo and others will have to come up with more attractive products to compete. Aside from the hardware, vendors will emphasize their ecosystems as well as finding synergies in adjacent markets.” 

With a number of manufacturers building health platforms based on gathering data from users, Zimmerman said that, along with new business models, the coming years will see “discussion on how best to protect the sensitive data that is being collected from wearables. In addition,” she concluded, “there is still room for improvement for most vendors to create more sophisticated apps and ecosystems around wearables.”  

About the Author

Christopher Piehler is the former editor-in-chief of THE Journal.

Featured

  • abstract networking lines with AI text on top

    WWT, NVIDIA Introduce Framework for Secure, Scalable, Responsible AI Adoption

    Technology services provider World Wide Technology and NVIDIA have jointly developed an AI security framework dubbed AI Readiness Model for Operational Resilience (ARMOR), designed to help organizations accelerate AI adoption while maintaining security, compliance, and operational resilience.

  • abstract generative AI technology

    Apple and Google Strike AI Deal to Bring Gemini Models to Siri

    Apple and Google announced they have embarked on a multiyear partnership that will put Google's Gemini models and cloud technology at the core of the next generation of Apple Foundation Models, a move that could help Apple accelerate long-promised upgrades to Siri while handing Google a high-profile distribution win on the iPhone.

  • large group of college students sitting on an academic quad

    Student Readiness: Learning to Learn

    Melissa Loble, Instructure's chief academic officer, recommends a focus on 'readiness' as a broader concept as we try to understand how to build meaningful education experiences that can form a bridge from the university to the workplace. Here, we ask Loble what readiness is and how to offer students the ability to 'learn to learn'.

  • Abstract futuristic background with blurry glowing wave and neon lines

    Microsoft Intros 'Cowork' Feature for Copilot, AI Updates

    Microsoft has announced a trio of AI updates, spanning Microsoft 365 Copilot, Security Copilot and Microsoft Foundry.