The worldwide personal and entry-level storage (PELS) market was up by 4,8% year-over-year with almost 19-million units shipped in the third quarter of 2014 (3Q14), according to the International Data Corporation (IDC) Worldwide Personal and Entry Level Storage Tracker.
Shipment values declined -0,3% year-over-year to $1,6-billion.
“The personal and entry-level storage market showed strong shipment growth in the third quarter of 2014 with 18,8-million units shipped,” says Jingwen Li, research analyst: storage systems at IDC. “Both the personal and entry-level portion of the market contributed to this growth. The personal storage segment saw good growth in the higher capacity portable devices as well as personal cloud devices.
“With the former, consumers are looking for ways to expand their storage and backup options beyond their laptops, while the latter, along with mobile devices, address the storage and file sharing needs of an entire household. The entry-level segment saw strong growth in higher bay products (six to 12 bays) as vendors introduce higher capacity offerings with more enterprise level features at a more SMB-friendly cost.”
HDD vendors continued to increase their share in PELS units shipped, gaining 1,5 percentage points year-over-year to grow to 78,7% market share. Although the entry-level storage market continued to be dominated by the mainstream non-HDD vendors, with 50,6% unit shipment market share, their market share continued to shrink by 14,5 points year-over-year.
The entry-level storage market continued to experience significant growth in unit shipments this quarter, up by 15,1% year-over-year, based primarily on the four-bay market. The entry-level market continued to see strong growth in the higher bay devices (six, eight and 12 bays), which saw units shipped grow by 35,7% year-over-year.
In 3Q14 the personal storage market saw growth for dual-bay products, where unit shipments were up by 7,1% year-over-year. Single-bay personal storage devices continued to remain the most popular choice, representing 97,5% of the personal storage units shipped in 3Q14.
Personal storage represents 98,9% of the PELS unit shipped and 87,2% of the shipment value in 3Q14.
The 3,5-inch form factor experienced a decline of -7,1% year-over-year in units shipped, while the 2,5-inch form factor saw units shipped up 8% year-over-year. The more portable 2,5-inch form factor continued to encroach into the market space of the 3,5-inch form factor, with 3,5-inch losing 2,4 percentage points of unit market share year-over-year in 3Q14.
End users continue to migrate to higher capacity points to meet their storage needs. In the 3,5-inch personal storage market, 2Tb devices represented 41,6% of unit shipments in the quarter. For the 2,5-inch personal storage market, 1Tb devices captured 60,7% market share.
For the entry-level market, capacity ranges are more varied due to multiple bays and vendors’ ability to partially populate devices. However, 4Tb devices hold the most market share with 23,4% of units shipped.
USB continued to be the interface of choice for the PELS market. Its units shipped were up by 4,7% year-over-year this quarter.
Ethernet remained the interface of choice for the entry-level market, capturing 94,8% of market share. Thunderbolt continued to ramp up, posting a year-over-year shipment growth rate of 7,3%, albeit off a very small base.

