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        Sales Boost Seen With Windows 7 Launch
        
        
        
			- By Kurt Mackie
- November 06, 2009
Sales of Windows 7 to U.S.  consumers during the operating system's October debut outpaced those of Vista when it first launched. 
That's one of the findings of The NPD Group, a market research  firm that tracked Windows 7 sales during the week of Oct. 18 to 24. The firm  found that Windows 7 unit sales were 234 percent higher than Vista  unit sales during its launch days. 
Windows 7 had its public debut on Oct. 22, so The NPD  Group's sales data included some prelaunch figures. However, the launch apparently  had a stimulatory effect.
"In a slow environment for packaged software, Windows 7  brought a large number of customers into the software aisles," commented Stephen  Baker, vice president of industry analysis at The NPD Group, in a prepared  statement.
Consumer buyers of boxed copies of Windows 7 were mostly  interested in the Windows 7 Home Premium Upgrade, followed by upgrade copies of  Windows 7 Professional and Windows 7 Home Premium Family Pack. The Family Pack  allows for licensing of Windows 7 on up to three PCs.
Although people were buying boxed software, the picture  changed markedly when The NPD Group looked at PC sales during the Windows 7  launch week. 
The company found that "Windows PC sales were down 6  percent compared to PC sales during the Vista  launch week." In addition, Baker said that "20 percent of sales  during the Windows 7 launch" involved new PCs with older OSes, such as  Windows XP and Vista. XP is still being sold  on netbooks, which may account for The NPD Group's finding.
Vista had the advantage of  being launched in January, which tends to be a better time for sales than  Window 7's October launch, according to Baker.
Initial Windows 7 sales may seem rosy compared with those of  Vista. However, overall, the launch of the new  OS gave Microsoft's Windows revenues a relatively modest bounce. During a first-quarter  financial briefing, Chris Liddell, Microsoft's chief financial officer, said  that commercial retail sales of Windows increased two percent due to Windows 7's  launch. 
Liddell suggested that consumers will still buy PCs in bad  economic times. He also predicted a renewed buying cycle would start up sometime  next year for corporate PC buyers.
On Thursday, Microsoft's CEO Steve Ballmer claimed that  Windows 7 sales were particularly big in Japan. He added that people tend to  buy PCs rather than boxed copies of Windows these days, according to a Digital  Trends story. However, that assessment didn't seem to be reflected in The  NPD Group's U.S.  study results.
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Kurt Mackie is senior news producer for 1105 Media's Converge360 group.