GPS leader navigates through tight market
As prices come down, satellite-reading devices will be even more popular
OLATHE, Kan. - After starting out by helping pilots get around, navigational device maker Garmin Ltd. is now more likely to aid a motorist in finding the quickest interstate or the nearest pizza parlor. But as drivers have snapped up millions of the satellite-reading devices for their cars, the surge in interest has attracted new and bigger players into what had been a rather isolated market. Now Garmin could need one of its GPS units just to keep from getting lost.
The Global Positioning System relies on 24 orbiting satellites maintained by the Defense Department for public use that allow users to triangulate their precise position.
At one time limited to pilots, boaters and the military, GPS units have become more commonplace as prices have come down and user-friendliness has gone up.
Research firm Strategy Analytics estimates that the number of GPS devices sold worldwide — including personal navigation units and applications built into cell phones and handheld computers — will grow from 18 million last year to 88 million in 2010. Garmin owns the U.S. title for personal navigation devices not built into dashboards, with more than 50 percent of the market.
Sony Corp. introduced its first GPS device this spring and Royal Philips Electronics NV, the biggest consumer electronics firm in Europe, has said it plans to get into the navigational game later this year. After-market auto parts manufacturers like Pioneer Electronics Inc., Kenwood Corp. and JVC Americas Corp. have followed suit.
Executives at Garmin, which is based in the Cayman Islands but headquartered in suburban Kansas City, say that while they respect the financial and brand-name power these companies have, they aren't too worried of being swept aside.
"Are they really focused on the markets we're focused on, or are they just trying to get in on the game because it's a growth business?" said Kevin Rauckman, the company's chief financial officer. He added: "Actually what they do is they do bring credibility."
Garmin plans to defend its position by continuing to roll out scores of new products — an expected 66 standalone models this year, compared to 55 last year, expanding the number and types of features.
"What we've done over time is try to make user interface and application and software as easy to use as possible," Rauckman said. "When the consumer sees what's available, they go, `Oh, this is easy to use and something I can take advantage of in my daily life.'"
When it started selling GPS units in 1991, Garmin was known mostly in the aviation and marine industries. It later made inroads to the outdoor and fitness crowd, selling handheld units that could keep mountain bikers from getting lost and help marathoners track their heart rate and calories burned.
That's what attracted Sean Staggs when he bought a Garmin Forerunner in February, figuring it would act as a training buddy as he jogged and biked around Kansas City.
Later, a friend pointed out that the device, which can track where a user has gone on a map and send the information to a computer, could help Staggs with the charity runs and bike rides he organizes for the National Multiple Sclerosis Society.
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