Apple on Monday said iPhone 5 preorders
topped 2 million in 24 hours -- more than double the amount of preorders
it had for the iPhone 4S.
The company said
that because demand exceeds initial supply, some pre-orders will be
delivered in October although most will be delivered this Friday.
Also on Monday AT&T, said it set a sales record for the iPhone 5, with customers ordering more of them than any previous iPhone model on the first day of preorders and over the weekend.
Also on Monday AT&T, said it set a sales record for the iPhone 5, with customers ordering more of them than any previous iPhone model on the first day of preorders and over the weekend.
Already,
there is a small group of people lining up outside the Fifth Avenue
Apple Store in Manhattan in anticipation of being one of the first to
snag a phone when it goes on sale at retailers on Friday.
Among
them is Apple fan Jessica Mellow, 27, who says she has been camping out
for iPhone 5 since Thursday. She is a veteran Apple camper, having
logged more than two weeks waiting for the iPhone 4s. "If we just
wanted the phone we could have ordered it online," she said on Monday.
"It's more about camping out. It's a cool experience. Meeting new
people. That's the best part."
Apple's Natalie Kerris says the company is "blown away" by consumer response to the new phone.
And
when iPhone 5 goes on sale in stores, analysts predict lines as long as
the record queues seen for the iPhone's debut in 2007.
"It will be a madhouse," says Piper Jaffray analyst Gene Munster.
Richard
Doherty, an independent tech analyst at Envisioneering Group, says the
immediate sellout for the pre-order makes for an "awkward" launch for
the new phone.
"Apple expected the pre-orders
to be a one-day cycle, and they were shocked that it was just one hour.
They clearly were caught by surprise by the size of the orders," Doherty
says. Had they continued fulfilling online orders, "they might have
only had two phones available at stores on Friday."
VIDEO:Ed Baig and Jefferson Graham go hands-on with the iPhone 5 at Apple's launch event
Phones
ordered online won't be delivered until Oct. 5 at the earliest,
according to Apple's website. And analysts say phones available at
retail, starting at 8 a.m. Friday, will probably be sold out by Sunday.
Munster
projects sales of 6 million to 10 million iPhone 5s in the first week,
most of which will be in the Friday-Sunday time period. That compares to
sales of 4 million of the iPhone 4S on its first weekend last October.
Munster
says the iPhone 5 probably won't be back in stock for weeks. "For the
iPhone 4 and iPad 2, they were gone after the first weekend, and there
were lines for weeks afterwards," he says.
The
iPhone 5 starts at $199 with a new or extended two-year contract. If
you're not yet eligible for the upgrade, the iPhone starts at $649.
Here's where to get the phone:
Apple.
Brave the line at an Apple retail store (Munster thinks fans will start
lining up earlier in the week.) Doors open at 8 a.m. (local time) on
Friday.
Walmart. You can pre-order in
the store with a $25 deposit, and return to pick it up. Calls to random
Walmart stores said the phone might be available Friday or later,
depending upon the size of its shipment. The chain throws in a free
movie rental from its Vudu digital service.
Best Buy.
The iPhone 5 goes on sale Friday, in-store. The online site isn't
taking orders or pre-orders, but is taking them in-store, with a $50
deposit. It hopes to fulfill orders on Friday.
Radio Shack.
Pre-order in store with a $50 deposit, and come back for the phone.
Calls to stores said buyers should get their phones, if not by Friday,
then by Monday.
The wireless carriers.
AT&T (ships within 14-21 business days), Verizon (ships Oct. 5) and
Sprint (ships Oct. 5) online with pre-orders. Or purchase at stores on
Friday.
"I'd recommend consumers skip the
carrier stores on Friday because they'll try to upsell you on services,
and the line will go really slow," Doherty says. "They might find more
satisfaction at a retailer."
Doherty believes
the line for the iPhone 5 will be the longest and most intense since
the first iPhone went on sale in 2007, attracting as many as 1 million
folks. But there's more to it than just heavy consumer demand in the
U.S.
Consumers in other countries where the
iPhone 5 won't be on sale until later also want to be first on the block
with the hot new device, and will pay handsomely for it. Doherty thinks
every other person on the line will be buying phones to ship out to
buyers elsewhere.
"We expect a lot of FedEx and UPS boxes to be going out to China, Europe and the Middle East that day," Doherty says.
Contributing: Adam Shell in New York; The Associated Press
http://www.usatoday.com/tech/personal/story/2012/09/17/apple-iphone-5-pre-orders-topped-2m-in-24-hours/57789680/1
http://www.usatoday.com/tech/personal/story/2012/09/17/apple-iphone-5-pre-orders-topped-2m-in-24-hours/57789680/1
No comments:
Post a Comment