Amid smartphone craze, DSLR market at cusp of giant leap

Despite smartphone makers launching devices with highend camera specifications to woo amateur shooters, the photography market in India is at the cusp of a significant leap and digital single-lens reflex (DSLR) cameras are, in fact, looking at stupendous growth in the months to come, a top Canon India executive has said.

By :  migrator
Update: 2016-10-17 16:45 GMT
Representative Image

New Delhi

With over 1,100 registered patented technologies in digital cameras, 2,300 in inkjet printers, 5,600 in multifunctional printers (MFPs) and more than 200 in scanners, Canon has emerged as one of the leading innovators in the digital imaging space.

“India is one of the fastest-growing economies of the world. I am more than happy that we are running the business successfully with DSLR cameras in the country despite the onslaught of camera-specific smartphones. We are witnessing a healthy growth rate of around 8-9 per cent in the camera market,” Kazutada Kobayashi, President and CEO, Canon India, said.

During the first half of 2016, the camera division contributed about 44 per cent to total revenue for Canon India. “The southern region has been the major contributor for revenue escalation, with a 32 per cent contribution,” Kobayashi added. “We closed the first half with nine per cent growth as compared to the similar period last year. This year, we have focused on restructuring and expansion of our key domains. We plan to achieve a double-digit growth (about 10 per cent) by the end of the year,” the executive added.

Canon’s research and development centre “ISDC” is located in Bengaluru and works on product development and research in the area of system LSI design and verification, embedded operating system (OS) and middleware technologies for cameras, multifunction printers, network surveillance cameras and healthcare modalities. The centre produces software not only for DSLR cameras but also for security cameras and printers.

The Indian market is different as the need is dynamic. “You can’t take a break in India as the market keeps moving. This year, we aim to finish at around Rs 2,350 crore compared to Rs 2,158 crore last year in overall revenue for Canon India,” he said. “For 2017-2019, we aim to grow by another 10 per cent year-on-year and reach another 33 per cent by the end of 2019 compared to this year,” Kobayashi noted. 

India is growing much faster than Hong Kong or Germany or the Netherlands, Kobayashi said. “Seeing the growth potential, we have also invested in new domains which include security cameras, medical cameras, projectors and scanners,” he pointed out.

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