Is Firefox’s 20% market share worth more than just 20%?
About a month and a half ago Mozilla announced
Firefox officially held a market share greater than 20%. At the time of posting this marketshare.hitslink shows the share to be 20.41%.
Not too shabby owning a fifth of the market. However a look at the statistics of some of the popular Technology website shows a Firefox market share exceeding 50%. Arstechnica reports a Firefox usage of 51.34%, ReadWriteWeb at 55.04% and Techcrunch just shy of 60% at 57.80%
You might argue that technology websites are likely to be viewed by enthusiasts who are likely to move away from the standard shipped browser and that real number lie in average users. But then again it is the enthusiasts who spend a lot more time browsing than their, if I may say, ‘regular’ counterparts. This is real life scenario.
Doesn’t this increase Firefox’s usage statistics then? As an unrealistically simplified example let’s take 20 people browsing for an hour each versus 70 people browsing for 15 minutes each. Firefox’s timewise usage is higher than IE in this example but that’s not what I’m going for. The point is Firefox may be pegged at 20% (which by the way is a huge achievement) but it’s 20% weighs and counts for a lot more.
Related posts:
- Why does Google continue to work with Mozilla while developing a product which is competition with it?
- Never mind Gmail, let’s take Chrome out of Beta!



“But then again it is the enthusiasts who spend a lot more time browsing than their, if I may say, ‘regular’ counterparts.”
I wonder if you’re right about the time spent online by users. ‘Regular’ users won’t consult the same sites or services than ‘enthusiasts’, but will spend their time on Yahoo and MySpace, or chatting on MSN. They don’t argue with people on ArsTechnica but it doesn’t necessarily mean that they are spending less time online.
I don’t have any statistics to prove my point but I still stand by it. A lot of my friends don’t like to check their university email everyday.
While my friends may have Facebook and maybe another couple of websites as part of their daily read lists (if that), I’m constantly jumping between Friendfeed, Tweetdeck, Reddit, Techmeme, Google Reader and other websites, almost in a circular manner.
My friends come back home after a night out and sleep, I come and check up on my RSS Feeds.
I might actually do a really small survey on this and see if it proves my point.