The two tables provide statistics regarding the sales and revenue generated by two electronic devices – laptops and smartphones – from five different regions. Overall, the trend of buying these products was similar, with Asia being the main area for purchases and Africa having the fewest products sold. Furthermore, the revenue was correlated to the number of sales made, and the figure for smartphones was substantially higher than their laptop counterparts.
Regarding the quantity of the item sold, smartphones showed a higher transaction during the year across all regions than laptops, with a 200000 to 1700000 items difference, varying across regions with Asia being the one with the highest disparities and Africa being the lowest. As smartphones are a dominant product, asian has shown two and a half million sold, over twice the second highest, which is North America with one and a fifth million, close to the third highest which is Europe with less than two thousand items. Alongside those data, South Americans and Africans were the least interested in this product, each showed five and three hundred thousand respectively. The trend is similar in the laptop statistic, but the number where substantially lower, with the dominant region, Asia only having eight hundred thousand, around one-third of the smartphone counterpart.
Regarding the final revenue, most figures were closely related to their initial quantity sold, with Asia bringing the most money, with 1,25 billion dollars on smartphones and 560 million dollars respectively. This trend is similar for almost all regions as their spending on products was proportionate with the revenue except in Asia, where they spend three times more on smartphones but only show twice the revenue.
