Report: Wearables to Ship 133 Million Units This Year
        
        
        
        
Wearable devices will see 15.9 percent growth  this year on their way to selling 132.9 million units, according to a new forecast  from International Data Corp. (IDC). Throughout  the forecast, the market will see a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 13.4  percent, reaching 219.4 million shipments in 2022.
"Consumers are finally starting to  understand and demand the utility of a smartwatch," said Jitesh Ubrani senior  research analyst for mobile device trackers at IDC, in a prepared statement.  "At present, fitness uses lead by a mile but mobile payments and messaging  are starting to catch on. The addition of cellular connectivity is also  starting to resonate with early adopters and looking ahead the emergence of new  use cases like music streaming or additional health sensors will make cellular  connectivity pivotal to the success of the smartwatch."
Basic wristbands will lead the market this  year, with a 35.9 percent share of the market and 47.7 million shipments. The category  will also see the lowest growth rate throughout the forecast period, however, at  just 0.3 percent, to finish with 48.2 million shipments and a market share of 22  percent in 2022.
Smartwatches will see 43.6 million sales this  year for a share of 32.8 percent. Throughout the forecast, the category is  predicted to experience a CAGR of 17.9 percent to grow to 84.1 million sales in  2022, though market share for the category will decline slightly to 38.3 percent.
"Over half of all smartwatches in 2017  were shipped by Apple, and while the company will maintain its lead in this  category, competing products from the likes of Fitbit, Garmin and all the Wear OS (previously Android Wear) vendors  will gain traction over time," according to an IDC news release. "Another  growing sub-segment within this category are smartwatches dedicated to kids,  though these will largely be relegated to China. Smartwatches are also expected  to have the highest average selling price and are forecast to account for more  than two-thirds of the dollar-value of the entire wearables market."
Basic watches will experience a CAGR of 16.4  percent, as shipments grow from 32.4 million this year to 59.4 million the year  the forecast ends, but the category's market share will see a more modest  growth, improving from 24.4 percent this year to 27.1 percent in 2022.
Basic watches "face challenges as vendors  have struggled to educate users around the benefits of these devices,"  according to IDC. "Many consumers still view these devices as timepieces  rather than as wearables that are part of a larger ecosystem and as a result  IDC expects this category to remain secondary to their smarter counterparts."
Earwear will see the fastest growth throughout  the forecast, with a CAGR of 48 percent, though it's starting out with a meager  2.8 million shipments this year and a market share of just 2.1 percent. By 2022  those numbers are projected to be 13.3 million and 6 percent, respectively.
"With the rise of smart voice-enabled  assistants, hardware developments from chip makers like Qualcomm, and the growing popularity of  wireless headphones, IDC anticipates this form factor to be the most popular  outside of wristbands and watches," according to a news release.
Clothing will come in second in terms of CAGR  at an even 30 percent, though it also comes in next to last among the five  major categories in terms of 2018 shipments with 4.1 million projected and a  2018 market share of 3.1 percent. In 2022 that growth will lend the category  11.6 million shipments and an improved market share of 5.3 percent.
"To date," according to IDC, "this  category has been driven by step-counting shoes from the likes of Li-Ning or Under Armour that mostly cater to  average consumers. However, going forward, IDC anticipates other niche brands  to start gaining traction as they target professional athletes or enterprise  workers in hazardous environments."
All other devices, as a category, will see a  modest growth in number of devices sold, impriving from 2.4 million units this  year to 2.8 million sales in 2022, but will see their market share decline from  1.8 percent to 1.3 percent over the same period.
"The others category, devised of lesser  known wearables, such as those that can be clipped to different parts of the  body or head-worn devices like the Muse headband, or even smart wristbands (ones that can run third-party apps), is  expected to maintain a very small portion of the overall market,"  according to information released by IDC. "The non-standard form factors  will make these devices a tough sell to the mass market, but their ability to  cater to very specific needs may make them a somewhat lucrative business."
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Joshua Bolkan is contributing editor for Campus Technology, THE Journal and STEAM Universe. He can be reached at [email protected].