By David Meyer, 19 October 2007 08:19
NEWS
Poor sales of Windows Vista-related products have hit the profits of PC World, according to its parent company DSG International.
In an interim trading statement, DSG International said a 0.6 per cent drop in its group profit margin over the 24 weeks to 13 October was "largely driven by slower Vista-related hardware sales and a changing sales mix in computing".
The group's chairman, Sir John Collins, said: "PC World delivered good sales performance against a tough prior-year comparative in the back-to-school period. The reduction in laptop stocks that arose out of disappointing sales of Vista-related products and a changing sales mix have reduced gross margins by around two per cent in the computing division, impacting group profits by around £20m in the first half. Stocks are now at normal levels and we expect to recover some of the lost margin through the second half."
Windows Vista was released to business customers in November 2006 and consumers in January this year.
A recent US report comparing early sales figures of Vista and its predecessor, XP, has suggested Vista is selling poorly there.
Research released earlier this month also claimed business sales of PCs with pre-installed Vista were slowing.
However, Dell has come out in support of the operating system with a prediction that most of its business customers will have migrated to Vista by 2009.
David Meyer writes for ZDNet UK


Comments
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1. anonymous
An obvious statement from Dell seeing as XP goes end of life in 2010, or is the statement to show solidarity with Microsoft in their hour of need?
2. Graham Coles
But surely this can't be true, Microsoft were just stating how Vista was their biggest selling operating system to date ...
As the Microsoft salesman was believed to say at a sales stand at an airborne flying display, '... and not only that, but the zunes are flying off the shelves as fast as these pigs too.'
Maybe they should change the WOW factor to the more realistic WHOA factor.
3. Karen Challinor
how about if PC world starts selling machines with an operating system of the customers choice rather than the current round of foistware from M$
of course then they would have to employ staff that understood what the differences were and could explain this to the customer
and there would be large price differences between say a Vista ultimate system with the Aero interface on and say a Ubuntu system with Compiz Fusion installed
I suspect sales of Vista to home users would cease around that point