50 percent of US Mac users paid to buy music downloads versus 16 percent of PC users
Posted by Dennis Sellers
Dec 19, 2007 at 10:38am
The consumer and retail information provider, The NPD Group says that consumers who own Macs are much more likely than PC users to pay to download music. According to NPD’s quarterly “Digital Music Monitor,” in the third quarter of 2007 half of all Mac users had paid to download music tracks from sites like iTunes, but just 16 percent of PC owners had done so.
And while Mac users were more likely to pay to download digital music than their PC-using counterparts, they were also more likely to purchase CDs.
“There’s still a cultural divide between Apple consumers and the rest of the computing world, and that’s especially apparent when it comes to the way they interact with music,” says Russ Crupnick, vice president and entertainment industry analyst, The NPD Group. “Mac users are not only more active in digital music, they are also more likely to buy CDs, which helps debunk the myth that digital music consumers stop buying music in CD format.”
According to NPD’s consumer panel data, unit-volume sales share for Apple computers increased from nearly six percent in 2006 to almost nine percent this year (January through October).
“Apple’s growing share in the personal computing environment—and continued success with iPod sales—is a potential harbinger for the continued growth of digital music,” Crupnick says.
Overall, more than 32 percent of Mac users report purchasing CDs in the third quarter of 2007, compared to just 28 percent of PC users. In addition to purchasing CDs and downloading music, Mac users are also more likely to listen to music and watch videos on their MP3-players and computers. While 34 percent of Mac users had uploaded music to their MP3 players, just 16 percent of PC users had done the same. Mac users are also much more likely to listen to music files on their computers (56 percent) than are PC users (31 percent).
“While the market for digital music is growing, it’s growing slower than many would like it to—CD sales are still declining and digital music has not replaced those lost sales,” Crupnick says. “The more consumers become comfortable paying for digital music, the more chance they will evangelize to others. And at this point in the game, it’s the growing base of Apple consumers that are the industry’s low-hanging fruit when it comes to converting from physical to digital music.”

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Contributor
Dennis Sellers
Dennis has been a newspaper editor/reporter (seven years) and teacher (seven years). He has over 4,000 magazine, newspaper and online articles to his credit. He has also covered the Mac and tech industries for over a decade for such online publications as MacCentral, MacMinute and now MacsimumNews.






