It took the Windows Phone Marketplace 14 months to reach the 50,000-app mark, while Google needed 19 months to get the same result, and Apple managed to get to the figure in 12 months. Of course, the Google Android Market now has eight times more apps than the Windows Phone Marketplace and Apple’s App Store has more than a half-million apps, so Microsoft has a lot of catching up to do, even though you can find most of the big titles on any of the three platforms.
Why Windows Phone hasn’t taken off
Where Microsoft is lagging, however, is the all-important market share. At 1.5 percent share in the third quarter of 2011, there are Windows Phone 7 devices on all four major carriers and the OS is constantly receiving warming reviews. So what’s the problem?
Charlie Kindel, former general manager of Windows Phone 7, argued in a blog post that it’s not the number of apps, the quality of the OS (which he says is superior to Android) or the hardware. He says the problem lies with the manufacturing partners of Windows Phone 7 devices, which do not invest enough in advertising for the platform, opting instead to push Android. He suggested that Microsoft should try to improve its relationship with carriers, who need to train their sales staff to push Windows Phone 7, as well as with manufacturers, who shouldn’t focus as much on Android, the market share leader.
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