December 16, 2004 3:01 PM PST
iTunes hits 200 million download mark
- Related Stories
-
Apple delivers iTunes Canada
December 2, 2004 -
Apple iTunes sales quicken
October 14, 2004 -
Apple whistles a happy iTunes
October 13, 2004 -
Apple strikes cell phone music deal
July 26, 2004 -
Apple sells 100 millionth download
July 12, 2004 -
Apple's iTunes sales hit 50 million
March 15, 2004
It took the company 11 months to sell its first 50 million songs and then another four months to get to 100 million songs. Three months later, the company hit 150 million, and it took just two months to get to 200 million.
"I like the trend," Eddy Cue, Apple's vice president of applications, said in an interview.
Apple has not only kept its sales growing, but it has maintained a commanding share of the online sales market, despite stepped-up competition from stores using Microsoft's Windows Media file format. The company also faces an uphill battle to convert those still using free file-swapping services such as Kazaa.
"We're still competing with piracy," Cue said.
To keep the store growing, Apple is moving in several directions, including its deal with Motorola to create a cell phone in the first half of next year that can play iTunes music.
"The idea behind this is to bring it to a mainstream set of folks buying phones today," Cue said. "We think having them play songs on their phone could be the first step to them getting an iPod."
Cue declined to say when the phone would launch, but said, "We are actively working on the device; we are very pleased with the results so far."
In large part, though, it is the torrid pace of iPod sales that has fueled the growth of Apple's online store.
"It's obviously a big factor," Cue said. "The primary reason people buy iPods is certainly to convert their CD libraries. Once you've done that it's just one click away to go to the music store."
Apple is working to make it even easier to buy songs--both with its recent deal to allow customers to pay with PayPal and with an expansion of the sale of prepaid gift cards. Apple has long offered gift certificates that can be bought online, but until recently the only place to buy physical gift cards was Target.
In recent weeks, Apple also started selling the cards at Best Buy, Circuit City, CompUSA, RadioShack and even 7-Eleven.
"What we are finding is there are just lots of customers buying those for gifts," Cue said.
What's Hot
Discussions
Shared
-
Mac Pro petition gaining steam on Facebook
71 comments
-
Apple tinkers with iPen stylus and haptic feedback
61 comments
-
How Facebook's Zucked-up IPO just killed the tech bubble
54 comments
-
Facebook worst IPO flop of the decade, Bloomberg says
50 comments
-
Sans cool iPad-like device, HP not catching Apple anytime soon
50 comments
RSS Feeds
Add headlines from CNET News to your homepage or feedreader.
RSS
Subscribemy Yahoo
Add this FeedGoogle
Add this FeedMSN
Add this Feed