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Posted On: 10 May 2013 11:44 am
Updated On: 12 November 2020 02:12 pm

Tablet sales set to outstrip PCs in Qatar by 2016

QNE
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With customer demand growing the shipment and sale of tablets are set to outstrip that of personal computers in Qatar by 2016, a report yesterday said. As a result, companies need look at “optimising” their websites for tablet viewing and interaction, said Genesis Consulting Middle East quoting figures from International Data Corporation (IDC). Over the years, online media’s influence has been gathering momentum and gaining an upperhand versus print media as more and more readers turn to the Internet for their daily information consumption. As consumers make their presence felt on Facebook, LinkedIn and Twitter, companies are obliged to embrace social media in a bid to engage with existing and potential customers. “However, one of the major challenges that marketers and communication specialists in Qatar face is the need to educate clients on the basics of online technology, web presence and social media – and how these can be adopted into their company’s growth strategy,” said Bahaa Fatairy of Genesis Consulting ME. Unfortunately, he said many SMEs want immediate results and fail to appreciate the importance of understanding website audit, analytic analysis and gradual yet sustainable marketing improvements. He also said that consumers’ changing lifestyle and in-depth understanding of the digital environment are now constant reminders that companies need to update their marketing approach or continue to fall behind. Facebook usage in Qatar and Middle East (excluding North Africa), for instance, stood at 26% or almost 24mn of the total Internet user population of 90mn as of June 2012, according to data from InternetWorldStats.com A research conducted by Google and Ipsos MediaCT last year also found that smartphone users in Qatar and Middle East are more likely to make mobile purchases than their American counterparts. Likewise, more than 90% of smartphone owners in the UAE, Egypt and Saudi Arabia are more perceptive of mobile advertising as they access the Internet on their device’s browser. Online marketing strategy, when executed properly, has the potential to effectively widen a company’s reach beyond its usual client base. Because it is relatively more cost effective than traditional methods of selling and promoting, Internet marketing also holds particular value to small and medium enterprises (SMEs), the report said. In Qatar and the rest of GCC and Middle East, as in many regions worldwide, the SME sector has been an invaluable economic driving force. In the UAE alone, the SME landscape has expanded so rapidly over the past years that it now represents 40% of the nation’s GDP, and is responsible for generating over 40% of the domestic employment requirements. “While there is currently no research that underscores the extent of regional SMEs’ online marketing penetration levels, anecdotal evidence shows that some companies, unfortunately, are late to the game as they fail to capitalise on possible sales leads that lie in cyberspace,” said Fatairy. However, the trend was not exclusive to Qatar and Middle East, the report said. In the United Kingdom, less tech-savvy SMEs are reportedly losing out on £122bn (in sales revenue by neglecting to develop and implement a sustainable marketing plan, particularly one that involves an online strategy, according to a survey published in March by the Centre for Economics and Business Research (Cebr). Fatairy said as their numbers increase and the market become highly competitive, SMEs must embrace innovation as their plan of action in order to remain afloat. “Online marketing, for this matter, has been an ideal platform to promote and grow a company, not just within its home base, but also worldwide as recent media trends would suggest,” he said. http://www.gulf-times.com/qatar/178/details/352098/tablet-sales-set-to-outstrip-pcs-in-qatar-by-2016