Nokia wants to regain its power position within the cellphone
business and plans to flood the developing world with cheap phones to do
it.
The once mighty Finnish company is set to announce a number of cheap feature phones and smartphones
at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona next week in a bid to turn itself
around, according to Reuters. Nokia posted six consecutive quarterly
losses before returning a small profit last quarter.
Still, the company has been soundly thrashed by Apple and Samsung in
the smartphone space and sold just 4.4 million Lumia smartphones last
quarter, compared to 79.6 million feature phones. It’s clear where Nokia
is making most of its money, and it plans to capitalize on that.
But Nokia faces stiff competition to all of its products from
dominant players like Apple and Samsung at the high end to lesser-known
but still formidable Chinese firms like Huawei and ZTE on the low end.
Taiwanese chipmaker Mediatek,
for example, has its eyes squarely on the cheap smartphone market in
Asia, India and Africa, where it plans to sell unsubsidized smartphones
that will cost less than $200.
Nokia has already made sure to offer a variety of very basic
smartphones in its Asha lineup. The devices tend to cost less than $100,
priced to sell mainly in emerging markets like China and India. Nokia
has also made sure that its Lumia lineup is more affordable, with
devices like the Lumia 620, a budget Windows Phone 8 phone that starts at $250 without a carrier subsidy.
Making sure that it has the budget devices that appeal to emerging
markets will be crucial to Nokia’s future business. But the company will
also need to continue pushing its Windows Phone 8 Lumia lineup to catch
up in more smartphone-penetrated markets like the U.S. and Europe.
Whether it will all be enough to ensure Nokia its leading mobile phone
maker position anytime soon is unlikely, but at least the company won’t
need to slip further into the abyss.
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