The smartphone has replaced most other personal electronics, but it won’t live forever. Here, Futuresource’s James Manning Smith looks at future smartphone trends & phone alternatives.

Since launching with the Walkman in the early 80’s, the personal electronics market has grown to reach US$540 billion in retail value in 2016 and supports a market of accessories worth a further $60 billion. The market is characterised by many failed, forgotten or fading products, such as the mini-disc player, ebook and pager, but ultimately is a market that has grown to account for 55 percent of total consumer electronics revenues.

The mobile phone is one of the greatest success stories in consumer electronics, but at the cost of many products it later came to cannibalise. Feature convergence saw camera phones, and recently smartphones, almost completely envelop discrete categories within the personal electronics market through the period 2005-2013.

The budding categories of personal audio/video and imaging particularly suffered. In 2007, the products out-shipped smartphones, but just three years later, smartphone demand had more than doubled. Digital cameras and MP3 players both had lost their relevance. In just one year, two progressive categories had gone from respectable demand growth to a ten percent fall in shipments.

Current & future smartphone trends

Since 2011, the personal electronics market has almost entirely converged around the smartphone. In 2017, we expect 2.6 billion personal device shipments, of which smartphones will account for 68% of all devices, versus 1.3% of standalone cameras and personal AV products, which at their peak accounted for almost 20% of the personal electronics market volume.

Manipulated by demand, mobile phones have been kneaded in terms of shape, size and feature-set. Initial pressure pushed smaller form-factors. The feature phone was something we needed, but its bulkiness was off-putting—we were not willing to give up pocket space for a device that could merely send and receive calls and texts. The emergence of smartphones, alongside YouTube, Facebook and Instagram, expanded the content we could consume from a handheld device, demanding a greater screen size for a more immerse experience and convenient use.

In addition to screen size, there is a view that tangible advances to smartphones have slowed in the last few years. High-end or flagship smartphones are almost homogeneous. Competition in both hardware and software is difficult when the ‘ultimate’ smartphone design, use-case and feature-set have been found. So, are we at the end point of the smartphone? Have vendors created the ‘perfect’ consumer portable device? Has portable electronics reached its pinnacle, from both an industry and user perspective?

Phone alternatives: VR assistants, wearables & more

New phone alternative products and technologies are emerging which have the potential to reduce consumers’ reliance on smartphones. Those are technologies which offer new windows into the Internet, and potentially more convenient and/or secure ways to interface with it. E-sim, flexible displays, voice UI, next generation wearables are all beginning to show their potential to influence, or even derail, the smartphone’s dominance.

phone alternatives Essential Home smart home deviceCertain smartphone functions are already transferring to other discreet ‘devices’. One example is virtual personal assistants (such as the new Essential Home, pictured) in the home and the car. The early popularity of these devices in the home suggests that the mobile handset is not the only way consumers want to access and control cloud-based services and hardware.

Through flexible displays, we expect to see a resurgence of the clamshell form factor, and later fully malleable smartphones, such as in Lenovo’s 2016 flexible phone prototype pictured at the top of this story. In a recent Futuresource survey of the flexible display industry, it emerged that an expected 17% of phones will include a curved or malleable display by 2021, among other smartphone trends.

Flexible technology will also lend itself to head-mounted displays, an important emerging personal entertainment device. Virtual reality is already a promising segment, and is the catalyst for a growing personal entertainment market using dedicated devices, moving away from smartphones, tablets and PCs.

While the smartwatch market has stalled, the longer-term opportunity for wrist-bound devices with a range of smartphone features remains an opportunity. Already, there are clear benefits for some smart functionality—for example, greater security from a payment device being attached to the body, opposed to being loose in our pockets.

As technology facilitates better smartwatch designs and the inclusion of features consumers demand from smart devices, the question is: do we need larger form factor devices? While it is uncertain which device will fill the content consumption gap left by the smartphone, for communication and on-the-go use, the smartwatch will soon be a rival standalone product.

future smartphone trends Eversight cyclist smart glasseseSim is set to remove the need for a physical sim card and allow multiple device registrations under one network identity. In the distant future, our connected world could manifest itself in a series of more convenient and application specific devices and ‘connected accessories’. A market of tethered eye-wear, watches, wearable cameras (like those on Everest’s new cyclist smart glasses, seen here) and other independent screens or devices could take the smartphone’s place, resemble the more diverse standalone personal electronics model from 20 years ago.

The fluidity, and ability, to move between devices eSim could bring may provide greater consumer choice and more advanced individual technologies than are available or possible when limited to the smartphone. As the consumer IoT and smart home market progresses, we will see less and less reliance on the smartphone.

Smartphone trends spell the end of smartphones?

Ultimately, we could be deconstructing aspects of the future smartphone as usage of certain functions transfer to more appropriate form factors, based on convenience, security and improved experience.

The smartphone will, most probably, remain the most important personal electronics device for consumers for the foreseeable future, but as technology progresses, we will not rely, or be limited to the smartphone forever. The future smartphone market will eventually fall. New standalone devices will come to market, and inevitably, another product will again push these from relevance.

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