To obtain both qualitative and quantitative insights, supply-side and demand-side stakeholders were interviewed throughout the primary research phase. CTOs, VPs of engineering, heads of product development, regulatory compliance officers, and commercial directors from businesses that produce wireless power transmission systems, supply semiconductor components, and provide charging infrastructure were among the supply-side attendees. Demand-side participants included procurement officers for healthcare technology, product managers for consumer electronics, engineering directors for automakers, facility managers for EV charging networks, smart manufacturing, medical device companies, and telecom infrastructure providers, and experts in industrial automation. In addition to confirming product roadmap dates and validating technology segmentation, the study included information on price structures, interoperability standards, adoption hurdles, and infrastructure deployment strategies.
Primary Respondent Breakdown:
By Designation: C-level Primaries (32%), Director Level (30%), Others (38%)
By Region: North America (32%), Europe (30%), Asia-Pacific (33%), Rest of World (5%)
Global market valuation was derived through revenue mapping and technology adoption analysis. The methodology included:
Identification of 50+ key technology providers across North America, Europe, Asia-Pacific, and Latin America
Product mapping across magnetic resonant coupling, inductive coupling, capacitive coupling, and microwave power transmission technologies
Application coverage spanning consumer electronics, electric vehicles, industrial automation, medical devices, and telecommunications infrastructure
Analysis of reported and modeled annual revenues specific to wireless power transmission portfolios
Coverage of manufacturers and technology providers representing 75-80% of global market share in 2024
Extrapolation using bottom-up (unit shipment × ASP by application and power range) and top-down (manufacturer revenue validation and industry association benchmarks) approaches to derive segment-specific valuations