Have Digital Camera Sales Bottomed Out?

Source: Statista

“The best camera is the one that’s with you”. This phrase, coined by the award-winning photographer Chase Jarvis, probably best describes the impact that smartphone cameras had and still have on the world of photography. The cameras built into our phones may still be inferior to dedicated digital cameras in general and SLR cameras in particular, but they are constantly getting closer and they have the priceless advantage of always being within reach.

When the first touchscreen smartphones made waves in 2007 and 2008, the camera industry was doing very well. In 2008, members of the CIPA, an association of the world’s most renowned camera makers, shipped almost 120 million digital cameras and probably didn’t worry too much about the upcoming competition. Back then, smartphone cameras were no match in terms of image quality and photo apps such as Instagram or Snapchat hadn’t been invented yet.

10 years later, the situation of the camera industry looks very different. Not only do most people always have their smartphone with them, but the lenses and sensors built into mobile phones are getting better and better. Having raced to ever-higher megapixel counts in the early years of the smartphone boom, recent developments have focused on improving performance in low-light conditions, where the difference between smartphones and dedicated cameras used to be most obvious. As our chart illustrates, global camera shipments by CITA members dropped by nearly 80 percent since peaking in 2010. On a positive note, it appears that the industry managed to stop the bleeding in 2017, when shipments improved by 3 percent after five consecutive years of double-digit declines.

Digital Camera Sales Infographic

U.S. Seniors No Longer Disconnected From the Digital World

While young people in the United States have grown up using technology and spend a substantial part of their lives online, people from older generations are not what we often refer to as “digital natives”.

A record 46 million seniors live in the United States and many of them are still disconnected from the digital world. However, according to the Pew Research Center, technology adoption of Americans aged 65 and older is on the rise. 67 percent of U.S. seniors now use the internet, up from just 12 percent in 2000.

As our chart illustrates, older Americans still trail the overall adult population in terms of tech usage, but the digital gap is no longer as pronounced as it used to be.

This chart shows how many seniors in the U.S. use or own certain types of technology.

Infographic: U.S. Seniors No Longer Disconnected From the Digital World | Statista You will find more statistics at Statista

NAR Webinar: Co-Marketing in a Digital Age under RESPA

NAR’s Real Estate Services program hosted a Webinar on April 5, 2017 with Mitch Kider, the Chairman and Managing Partner of Weiner Brodsky Kider PC, on co-marketing in a digital age under RESPA. Mitch discussed real estate professionals’ social media and web-based marketing tools, focusing on issues raised by the Real Estate Settlement and Procedures Act (RESPA) and co-marketing efforts between settlement service providers.