Shipments of Digital Media Adapters Grew in 2Q18

Shipments of Digital Media Adapters Grew in 2Q18
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The worldwide market for smart home devices inclusive of connected lights, smart speakers, connected thermostats, smart TVs, home monitoring/security products, digital media adapters, and more, grew 38.5% to 130.1 million shipments in the second quarter of 2018.

Outside of smart TVs, digital media adapters, such as the Roku devices and Amazon's Fire TV, accounted for the largest share of the smart home devices market. This category grew 26.8% year over year during 2Q18, according to the IDC. While today's smart TVs replicate much of the functionality offered by digital media adapters, the general lack of software updates and vast installed base of non-smart TVs has allowed digital media adapters to proliferate.

"Networked entertainment represents a key stepping stone for consumers as they embark on their smart home journeys," said Adam Wright, senior research analyst for IDC's Consumer IoT Program. "Digital media adapters are an important gateway into content ecosystems as well as broader consumer IoT ecosystems in general, such as smart assistants and related services, and their low price point is drawing interest from a growing base of consumers worldwide.

Amazon's line of Fire TV products led the pack in 2Q18 with close to 5 million units shipped worldwide. While many compare the retail giant's efforts to other over-the-top (OTT) services like Netflix or Hulu, the reality is that Amazon also competes with other hardware makers such as Roku and Google. And Amazon has been leading by a large margin thanks to a growing lineup of content that appeals to an international audience.

In second place behind Amazon was the search giant Google with Chromecast. The low-cost, simple option has worked extremely well for Google as many customers have purchased more than one device. With built-in support for Google Home and, more importantly, YouTube, Google has managed to carve out a noteworthy piece of the pie by shipping 3.7 million devices across the globe during 2Q18.

Rounding out the top 3 was Roku. Although this company has been extremely popular in the U.S., its presence in the rest of the world remains limited. However, the company's unique business model of being a content delivery platform rather than a hardware maker has allowed it to offer some extremely low-cost products that cater to value-conscious consumers.

"The tight integration of content and hardware has been a highly successful strategy to date and we only expect the walls in these gardens to grow taller and wider as these companies begin to create ecosystem lock-in by further integrating with additional smart home devices and services," said Jitesh Ubrani senior research analyst for IDC Mobile Device Trackers. "Despite this, IDC still expects the market for more neutral hardware platforms like Roku to grow as consumers are rarely faithful to one content provider.