• Home
  • News
  • Apple announces Services expansion to Africa, Others
Image

Apple announces Services expansion to Africa, Others

Apple Inc recently announced its plan to expand its App Store, Apple Music and other services to dozens of new markets in Africa, the Middle East and beyond in the biggest geographical expansion of its services in almost a decade.

Apple said it would expand the App Store to 20 countries, eight of them in Africa, and would offer its streaming Apple Music service in 52 additional countries and regions.

According to the Report, the expansion is the largest since Apple grew what was then called the iTunes Store to India, Russia and more than 50 other countries in 2012.

Apple has focused on growing sales from its services segment, which totaled 17.8 per cent of its $260.1 billion in revenue in its most recent fiscal year, as consumers have slowed in upgrading their smart phones. Apple executives said in January that the company had an installed base of 1.5 billion active devices and aimed to reach 600 million subscribers to either its own or third-party services by the end of this year.

Apple’s biggest services revenue generator is the App Store, where it keeps a cut of between 15 per cent and 30 per cent of sales. In Africa, the store will expand to Cameroon, Ivory Coast, Democratic Republic of Congo, Gabon, Libya, Morocco, Rwanda and Zambia. It will also become available in the Maldives and Myanmar in the Asia-Pacific region, Afghanistan and Iraq in the Middle East, and several nations in the Balkans and Oceania, for a total of 175 countries.

The company is also expanding its Apple Music service, bringing the total to 167 markets. Apple’s top streaming rival, Spotify Technology SA, operates in 79 countries.

Apple will have different terms and pricing for streaming music in the new markets. In the United States, Apple offers a three-month free trial and charges individual users $9.99 a month thereafter. In the new markets, Apple will offer a six-month trial period and adjust monthly prices Ivory Coast and Myanmar, and $4.99 in markets such as Iraq and Kuwait.

Related Posts

WIOCC secures $65m sustainability-linked financing to boost Africa’s digital infrastructure

WIOCC Group, Africa’s foremost open-access digital infrastructure provider, has successfully raised an additional $65 million in sustainability-linked debt…

PZ Cussons abandons Africa sell-off, bets big on Nigeria and continent’s growth

PZ Cussons Plc has dramatically reversed course, scrapping plans to divest its African subsidiaries and instead unveiling an…

Kenya overtakes Nigeria as Africa’s fastest-growing private-sector economy

Kenya has seized the crown as Africa’s fastest-expanding private-sector economy, ending Nigeria’s long dominance, according to the latest…

Greenwich Holdings appoints Samson Ariyibi as Group MD

Greenwich Holdings Limited (GHL) has appointed Mr. Samson Oyewale Ariyibi as its first Group Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer,…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *