IE Market Share: Down Nearly 15 Percent in Two Years
The stock market’s performance this past year isn’t the only thing that’s charting historic lows. According to preliminary metrics from Net Applications, the share of the browser market held by Microsoft’s (MSFT) Internet Explorer has slipped below 70 percent (click on chart above). IE’s market share topped out at 68.15 percent in December, down from 69.77 percent in November and 71.27 percent in October. Astonishing, given that it began the year at around 75 percent. Meanwhile, Firefox, Apple’s (AAPL) Safari, Google’s (GOOG) Chrome and even Netscape rose in share, with Firefox exceeding 20 percent for a full month, a trend that Net Applications expects will continue through December and beyond.
Now, Net Applications cautions that the December holiday season strongly favored residential over business usage, which increases the relative usage share of Mac, Firefox, Safari and Chrome. So perhaps the IE’s lower usage during the month was a bit more pronounced than it might otherwise have been. But that doesn’t change the fact that its reign is clearly in decline. In January of 2007, IE held nearly 80 percent market share; now it holds 68.15. Still, the lion’s share of the market, but a share that has slipped nearly 15 percent in just two years, (click on chart below) and given recent news, seems certain to slip further in the months ahead.






Comments
“Net Applications cautions that the December holiday season strongly favored residential over business usage, which increases the relative usage share of Mac, Firefox, Safari and Chrome.”
I think this is more of a commentary on usage when people are given the choice of what browser to use than anything I’ve read in a while. And perhaps OSes as well.
Posted by Paul Greatbatch at January 2nd, 2009 at 9:59 amThe author seems to have conflated “percent” with “percentage point”. Most of the statistics in the story are therefore either wrong or mislabeled. (Example: A 12 percentage point decline in market share, from 80% to 68%, is a decline of 15%, not 12%.)
Posted by Charlie Brenner at January 2nd, 2009 at 10:14 amPoint taken, Charlie. That said, the figure to which you referred was accurate (14.8 percent is clearly “more than 10 percent”), though perhaps less informative than it could be. We’ve adjusted it accordingly.
Posted by John Paczkowski at January 2nd, 2009 at 11:29 amThe “e” drug is dead. Let dead dogs lie. er, Dead drugs die.
Posted by Mark Light at January 3rd, 2009 at 12:45 pmWill MS ever stop using and being dependent on drugs?
Posted by Mark Light at January 3rd, 2009 at 12:47 pm