The end of the DSLR (and now mirrorless) has been circulating for 5 years or more. Yet here we have manufacturers still producing new products, so yes the numbers shrink for a number of reasons.
I think that is a good thing. That means my results might stand out a bit more for higher quality work vs my competition in the area. I saw the same thing when Rebels were on sale and people rushed to get them, and we had a rash of "I am a photographer for senior, event or family photos", only to see so many of them fail because they thought just getting a camera was enough. Ditto with phone users, and in many cases, the results are now even worse.
Fun archived threads on topics like DSLR is dead, mirrorless vs DSLR:
https://photography-on-the.net …read.php?t=1493114&page=1
https://photography-on-the.net …/showthread.php?t=1399104
There are a few others too, but these were more active.

What I noticed with those sort of threads is the lack of sales stats to back up a lot of claims based on anecdotes made by persons whose business exposure is limited to services connected to photography within their town/city/state/country.
You can easily ID them by their point of view.
Harvard Students made a study on the industry side of digital still camera market vs smartphones.
https://d3.harvard.edu …s-the-one-thats-with-you/![]()



