Weekend frenzy led to 1 million iPhones sold?
Well, that was quick.
Just days after Apple kicked up a huge iPhone cloud of dust by announcing a $200 price cut, then apologized for its actions with a $100 store credit, the company announced that it has sold the 1 millionth iPhone. Apple reached that goal in 74 days, and it had allotted itself until the end of September to reach that mark.
That doesn't necessarily mean that there are 1 million iPhones in the wild. An Apple representative confirmed that the iPhone numbers are "sell-in," which means they reflect the number of iPhones that Apple has shipped to its retail outlets. Now, Apple's different from most companies in this case since it controls so much of its own distribution through Apple retail stores and its online store. But, of course, AT&T is also selling the iPhone, so there are a few iPhones out there in transit to AT&T or sitting on AT&T store shelves that could count as part of that 1 million figure.
Did a $399 iPhone help Apple reach its shipping targets ahead of schedule?
(Credit: CNET Networks)The timing of Monday's announcement struck some as interesting, given that one of the primary theories for the iPhone price cut was that Apple thought it was going to have trouble meeting that 1 million figure, and needed to stimulate demand. The Apple representative said the company was aware last week that it was close to the mark--and CEO Steve Jobs affirmed during the iPod event that Apple was on track--but it couldn't announce the sale of the 1 millionth iPhone until it actually happened over the weekend.
The representative declined to speculate about whether the price cut caused a frenzy of iPhone buying from Wednesday to Sunday. Piper Jaffray's Gene Munster was willing, however, to estimate that Apple sold 27,000 iPhones a day following the price cut.
That figure assumes that Munster's previous estimates that Apple was selling about 9,000 iPhones a day were correct. That means the company would have sold 594,000 iPhones from the beginning of July until last Wednesday, and then after the cut it would have sold an additional 136,000 units to reach the 1 million mark on Sunday, Munster wrote in a research note Monday.
It will be very interesting to see what iPhone sales do in September and over the rest of the year in response to the lower price. Even if the estimates are wrong and Apple sold more iPhones at $599 and fewer over the weekend, it seems fairly obvious that they'll sell more iPhones at $399 than they will at $599.
Tom Krazit writes about the ever-expanding world of Internet search, including Google, Yahoo, and portals, as well as the evolution of mobile computing. He has written about traditional PC companies, chip manufacturers, and mobile computers, spending the last three years covering Apple. E-mail Tom. 





that kind of stuff really pads your profit.
i think what apple did is fantastic. i can think of no other company
that would have gave a refund of any type to customers who
bought new technology before a price cut.
Even at the price it is now, go compare it against other phones. It's still overpriced.
worth it. If I get a $100 in addition to the phone that's awesome
for me. If someone pays $400 for the same phone I got for $600,
awesome for them. I don't feel ripped off and I'm definitely not a
chump.
this alone would be over half the price, the 3.5 in. screen would be
the largest for any touch phone. The functions alone for e-mailing
and browsing with full rich web pages that can be manipulated
with a touch or pinch of your fingers, the list goes on.
you really can't make a comparison, it is not a phone, it is a
computer.
- May be not exactly true.....
- by waterturtles September 12, 2007 12:56 PM PDT
- As soon as Apple "sells" a phone/computer to a retailer be it a
- Like this Reply to this comment
-
(8 Comments)reseller, university store or ?? they then consider it sold. So how
many are on the boat still coming in from China that Apple is
saying have been sold. I'm thinking Apple is blowing smoke (or
smoking what they have grown in their back yard) and has not
actually sold all of these to retail customers, but rather middle-
men in the supply chain. Last Apple box I bought was sold to a
University Book Store so Apple considered it sold and had
started the warranty clock based on that sale date. When I hissed
they changed the sale date so I could get the full Apple warranty
based on the purchase date from the University Apple Store. I'm
going to be hard pressed to believe anything from Apple after I
was just "had" on my iPhone purchase.