📺 Stream EntrepreneurTV for Free 📺

5 Challenges for Apple as it Aims at a Bigger Bite of India - 'The Place To Be' Apple India said its in 2015-16 sales increased 56 percent from INR 6,472 crore a year before.

By Aashika Jain

You're reading Entrepreneur India, an international franchise of Entrepreneur Media.

pisaphotography | Shutterstock

Apple is in India. And has chosen none other than India's Silicon Valley to manufacture Make in India Apple products.

Research firm Strategy Analytics's report says Apple has taken over the world #1 position in smartphone sales worldwide in the fourth quarter of 2016. Chief Executive Officer Tim Cook said on an earnings call this week said Apple's 2015-16 sales increased 56 percent from INR 6,472 crore a year before.

This comes at a time when arch-rival Samsung faced consumer backlash for exploding batteries of the company's Note 7 series. Huawei, Oppo and Vivo took the consecutive positions in the world leadership hierarchy according to Strategy Analytics.

It is no surprise Apple wants to bite in the largest chunk of the Indian consumer's pie. As per Counterpoint Technology Market Research, Apple is now the 10th biggest smartphone vendor, and top premium smartphone player in India. However, the company accounts for less than 2 percent of shipments in India, where an estimated 750 million smartphones will be sold by 2020.

In its recent earnings call, Cook said India is the 'place to be'. As Apple looks to increase its share in India, there are 5 key challenges the company may face.

Pricing

Apple iPhone prices have only been escalating since the first edition. The latest iPhone 7 priced between INR 60,000- INR 90,000 category is well out of the reach of the common man in India and falls short of meeting the demand of majority of consumers. Apple's other offering such Apple Watch, MACs as well as accessories all come under high-end categories.

Chinese opponents such Xiaomi and Huawei have much cheaper offerings and Apple stands to face stiff competition from such brands in India.

Demand

Meeting the demand of the world's second-largest country will not turn out to be as easy it appears to. Majority of India's population is yet to acquire smartphones and with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi's Digital India drive, an increase in cheaper versions of smartphones has begun.

Apple CEO Tim Cook recently said that Apple was witnessing double-digit growth in both Mainland China and India and the company is attracting a very high percentage of first-time tablet buyers. However, the demand for Apple's tablets may not continue as expected since smartphones are slowly emerging as a popular choice among new digital-savvy customers.

Timing

Apple is late to the party! While almost all smartphone makers fiercely battling to take a larger chunk of the market by offering cheaper versions, Apple also lost out on the opportunity it saw in selling second-hand phones in the Indian market. Last year, the Cupertino-based smartphone maker faced rejection from the Indian government on selling used phones to prevent dumping of hazardous electronic waste.

One could argue when Apple's products for the Indian masses would be available such that they can be readily bought by the country's consumers. By the time Apple sets shop, hope it doesn't get too late for it to establish dominance.

Competition

Post widespread saturation in the western nations, Apple is aiming to start manufacturing in India to boost sales.

Cheaper upcoming brands such as Oppo & Vivo and home-grown ones such as Micromax have seen significant interest from the large smartphone user base in India. Chinese companies including Gionee and ZTE are also clawing into India at a fast pace. This may put Apple in a position where it will only be limited to the wealthy.

Make In India

Apple plans to manufacture iPhones in India will bring some brownie points to the company. However, Cook's attempts to enter the aggressive Indian market have been seeing hindrances by the company's demands of a 15-year tax holiday on imports of components and equipment.

While the Indian government has agreed to the a manufacturing unit in the country, no incentives have yet been finalised.

At a time when every global giant wants to set it's foot in India's growing market, the Indian government is unlikely to relent to Apple's demands and may go ahead with pushing home-grown companies to produce high-quality products.

Indian-make companies such as Karbonn Mobiles, Lava International, Micromax Informatics and LYF are producing smartphone of the aam aadmi and have bee riding on the Make in India drive.

Aashika Jain

Entrepreneur Staff

Former Associate Editor, Entrepreneur India

Journalist in the making since 2006! My fastest fingers have worked for India's business news channel CNBC-TV18, global news wire Thomson Reuters, the digital arm of India’s biggest newspaper The Economic Times and Entrepreneur India as the Digital Head. 
Side Hustle

These Coworkers-Turned-Friends Started a Side Hustle on Amazon — Now It's a 'Full Hustle' Earning Over $20 Million a Year: 'Jump in With Both Feet'

Achal Patel and Russell Gong met at a large consulting firm and "bonded over a shared vision to create a mission-led company."

Side Hustle

How to Turn Your Hobby Into a Successful Business

A hobby, interest or charity project can turn into a money-making business if you know the right steps to take.

Collaboration

5 Ways Solopreneurs Can Scale Their Business Through Collaboration

Our culture loves to perpetuate the myth that entrepreneurs must go it alone. But for many, the path to success is found in collaboration.

Business News

These Are the 10 Most Profitable Cities for Airbnb Hosts, According to a New Report

Here's where Airbnb property owners and hosts are making the most money.

Productivity

Want to Be More Productive? Here's How Google Executives Structure Their Schedules

These five tactics from inside Google will help you focus and protect your time.

Science & Technology

Service as a Strategy — How to Build a Sustainable, Future-Ready Tech Business

The benefits of transitioning from traditional SaaS models to service-based models — and how to do it successfully.