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Nokia pushes $99 Internet phone in market share battle

Published: 12 May 2013 - 06:23 am | Last Updated: 03 Feb 2022 - 08:19 am

By Devidutta Tripathy

Nokia is betting low-priced phones with Internet capability will help it regain lost ground in crucial emerging markets after falling behind in the global smartphone race.

Nokia CEO Stephen Elop unveiled a new $99 phone in its mid-range Asha line at a launch in India, one of the most important markets in his bid to revive the struggling Finnish firm.

The new phone offers Internet access on a touch screen with built in applications for popular social media sites and more features than earlier models, which fell short of a full-fledged smartphone.

He also announced a revamp of the Asha software platform in the hope of persuading more developers to write applications for Asha phones.

Elop, hired in 2010 to turn around the once-dominant handset maker, is under pressure as a controversial decision to switch to Microsoft Corp’s Windows software is yet to bear significant results after two years, with shareholders this week saying he should reconsider the move.

Although more people are buying phones with computer-like features, most of the handsets Nokia sells are regular phones. Its failure to cash in on the smartphone boom saw it last year cede its 14-year reign as the world’s top phone maker to South Korea’s Samsung Electronics.

“The market is undeniably moving towards smartphones — although India may be moving at a slower pace than the likes of China, but it is still the case,” said Jessica Kwee, a Singapore-based analyst at research firm Canalys.

While Nokia has seen brisk sales of its Windows-based Lumia smartphones, it still has just a five percent share of a global smartphone market dominated by Samsung and Apple Inc.

So-called “smart feature phones” like those in the Asha range, which have limited smartphone capabilities such as Internet and email access and touch screens but are cheaper than the likes of Samsung’s high-end Galaxy models or Apple’s iPhone, are crucial to Nokia’s future as it defends its leading market share in emerging economies such as India and Africa.

The launch of Asha, which means “hope” in Hindi, last year helped Nokia recapture some of its lost share in India and retain its leadership at about 26 percent of a market where it faces growing competition from Samsung and local rivals such as Micormax, Karbonn and Lava.

The new Asha 501 has design elements similar to the higher spec Lumia line, features applications for social media sites such as Facebook, LinkedIn, and Twitter, and supports Indian languages.

Nokia said the Asha software development kit would make it easier for developers to come up with smartphone-like apps and to sell content from within them. The in-application payment system would be launched in a few weeks, Nokia said in a statement.

BRIGHT SPOT

India has been a rare bright spot for struggling Nokia, which has seen its sales fall year-on-year for eight straight quarters. It was Nokia’s No.2 market in 2012 after China in net sales and has been relatively steady compared with China, where net sales fell nearly 60 percent last year.

“India is very important,” said Elop. “India is a bellwether market, it’s a very leading indicator of some of the trends, some of the new technologies, some of the new consumer requirements that people are asking for.”

For the three months to March, Nokia had a 23 percent share of mobile phone sales in India, the world’s second-biggest cellular market by customers, Strategy Analytics estimates. Three years ago it controlled more than half the Indian market.

Nokia’s “production, pricing and mindset have been long established to churn out millions of standardised models at low prices,” said Neil Mawston, British-based executive director at Strategy Analytics, but added the company faces “strong headwinds” from local competition.

 

ANDROID COMPETITION

The biggest threat for Nokia in the low-end segment of Internet-enabled phones is cheaper devices running on Google Inc’s Android software, typically made in China and Taiwan and shipped worldwide to be sold by local companies.

In India, the cheapest Android phone available from online retailer Flipkart.com is priced at about $61, whereas a touch-screen Asha phone starts at $72.

For the first time, global smartphone shipments overtook that of smart feature phones in the three months to March.

The challenge for Nokia is to convince entry-level smartphone buyers that the Asha can fulfil their needs and give a smartphone-like experience, said Rajat Agrawal, executive editor at gadget reviewer BGR India.

“These are the devices they think will compete with the $100-$150 Android smartphones. The biggest challenge over there is the whitebox manufacturers,” he said, referring to low-cost Android phones.

The new Nokia phone has a lengthy 17 hours of talk time and 48 days of standby time, an attractive feature in a country like India where many people don’t have regular access to electricity and power cuts are frequent.

“Nokia needs a killer model for the high-growth smartphone market ... an iPhone 3G or Galaxy S1, a revolutionary model that stands apart from the rest on usability or design and one that will ship tens of millions of units worldwide,” said Mawston.

“Nokia’s task for recovery is easy to say, hard to do.”

Reuters



Viber to take on Skype with desktop service

The free calls app Viber is to challenge Skype’s domination of the free Internet phone services market by extending its service to desktop computers for the first time. The move comes as the company announced it now has 200 million regular users, up from 140 million at the end of 2012. The figure is a major milestone for the Cyprus-based firm — but it is still dwarfed by Skype, which has more than 600 million users, and the heft of its owner, Microsoft, behind it.
Like Skype and free texting phone app Whatsapp, the Viber mobile client offers free messaging and calls. The desktop version is the first in its suite to offer video calls. “People spend a substantial amount of time on their smartphones.
However, a lot of that usage takes place at home or in the office, where they have laptops or desktops close by,” said the Viber chief executive, Talmon Marco. The release of Viber Desktop is part of the rollout of Viber 3.0, a release which will include major updates to both the Android and iOS versions, as well as a new version for BlackBerry.
The company has also added eight new languages as part of its bid to take on Skype, which transformed international communication when it launched its free phone service 10 years ago. Though not compatible with existing voice-over-Internet-protocol (VoIP) systems using the SIP protocol, Skype grew more rapidly because its peer-to-peer system ensured better call quality and lower latency than other VoIP setups.
Since then, Skype has launched video calls, recently adding HD-quality video, and last week its owner Microsoft — which paid $8.5bn for the company in 2011 — announced it was integrating the Skype service with Outlook webmail services.The Guardian