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CIRP: Android loyalty ‘slightly’ exceeds iOS loyalty

Consumer Intelligence Research Partners (CIRP) has released research on mobile phone operating system consumer behavior in the U.S., including Apple’s iOS and Google’s Android.

The research group finds that between Android and iOS, loyalty to each has remained steady since early 2016, at the highest levels seen. Android has a 91% loyalty rate, compared to 86% for iOS, measured as the percentage of customers that remain with each operating system when activating a new phone over the 12 months ending December 2017. From January 2016 through December 2017, Android loyalty was 89-91%, while iOS loyalty was 85-88%.

“Android user loyalty now slightly exceeds that of iOS users,” says Josh Lowitz, partner and co-founder of CIRP. “Over time, Android loyalty gradually increased, as it achieved parity in availability of apps, music and video, and as the user experience on the two platforms became more similar. Android users also benefit from a wide range of phones from different manufacturers, so they can switch hardware without learning a new operating system.”

iOS and Android compete more aggressively as the number of first-time smartphone buyers shrinks, adds Mike Levin, partner and co-founder of CIRP. With fewer users of the legacy smartphone operating systems, basic phone owners, and first-time mobile phone buyers, Android and iOS now mostly gain and lose users to the other operating system.

“Still, the rate of switching between Android and iOS is different than the absolute number of users that switch between the two operating systems,” says Lowitz. “We know Android has a larger base of users than iOS, and because of that larger base, the absolute number of users that switch to iOS from Android is as large or larger than the absolute number of users that switch to Android from iOS. Looking at absolute number of users in this way tends to support claims that iOS gains more former Android users, than Android does former iOS users.”

CIRP bases its findings on quarterly surveys, with a sample of 500 subjects in each, from March 2013-December 2017, that activated a new phone in each of the quarters surveyed.

Dennis Sellers
the authorDennis Sellers
Dennis Sellers is the editor/publisher of Apple World Today. He’s been an “Apple journalist” since 1995 (starting with the first big Apple news site, MacCentral). He loves to read, run, play sports, and watch movies.