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Thursday, January 24, 2013

Why Huawei should get out of the mobile handset market

or why Huawei need to spend their £1.6 billion profit on marketing

James Rosewell writes:

Huawei is a company one can’t miss at Mobile World Congress. They bring their own building!  Plus last year a wonderful “Pegasus” flying horse sculpture made using Ascend handsets was proudly displayed next to the main fountain to hail the launch of the Ascend series of handsets.

Huawei has been busy following MWC12. They now run major parts of Everything EverywhereThree and O2’s network in the UK. On a less positive note they’re not welcome in the US.

But how has the devices side of the business performed?

Poorly when measured by their share of web traffic. According to 51Degrees.mobi over the past 15 months web usage share has fallen in the US to below 1.5% and remains static in the UK not peeking above 0.2%. See the following chart.

Huawei Share of Web Usage during December 2012 in the UK and US

Huawei Share of Web Usage during December 2012 in the UK and US. Source 51degrees.mobi.

Huawei has an excellent range of handsets including the Ascend D Quad; a quad-core phone released in 2012. They make the CPU themselves. Then there’s the mid-range Ascend G300 which retails for less than £120 on pay as you go in the UK. The problem isn’t handset quality or range. Huawei does not have an established consumer brand.

Huawei needs to fix the brand problem if they’re serious about the devices business in western markets. That does not mean a few high profile adverts during the Olympics or more clever sculptures at Mobile World Congress in February. It means much more:

  1. For consumers Huawei are an unknown brand. “Who are they?”  They will need a jaw-dropping advertising budget. How about the bulk of the recently announced £1.6 billion 2012 net profit for starters.
  2. Huawei needs serious deals with carriers. This is possible in the UK, but harder in the US due to the dim view rightly or wrongly taken by the US government. These will come if the aforementioned marketing budget is there.
  3. Aggressively priced market leading handsets. Samsung quality at a lower price.

Unless Huawei stumps up the advertising budget they might as well give up. Maybe switch to making good OEM handsets for others to slap their brand on. Or perhaps just stick to what they do best, networks, and avoid the mistake Ericsson made in the late 1990s trying to grow in the GSM handset business (anyone else remember the T28?).

Others have tried to enter the western handset market and failed due to insufficient marketing budgets. HP was the most recent example and it cost them dearly.

PS. Whilst writing this post I was discussing the subject with a a friend who'd been at CES a few weeks ago. He commented on the Huawei executives who all sheepishly hid their Samsung Galaxies when asked about Huawei's handsets. If the staff aren't using the handsets then that's not a good sign either.

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Opinion Articles

giffgaff has an official voice worth listening to

Mark Bridge writes:

Yesterday I spotted a new blog page from O2-supported MVNO giffgaff. The company’s head of digital marketing Rob Gotlieb announced the finished version of a promotional film – and mentioned the official voice of giffgaff, voiceover artist Tom Oldham (who, interestingly, was also the voice on Vodafone ads at one point). And for a moment I thought “Official voice?  You what?”

Author: The Fonecast
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Mobiles go meddling in medicine

Mark Bridge writes:

“Okay, Mr Bridge, just relax. This won’t hurt a bit. I just need to… oh, hold on a moment, my phone’s crashed. I’ll just pop the battery out and we can start again.”

Some years ago I read an article in Fast Company magazine. Entitled “They Write the Right Stuff”, it explained how NASA’s software engineers couldn’t afford to make errors because any mistakes were likely to kill their colleagues.

That need to check, double-check and then check again was also one of the reasons the space agency ended up looking on eBay for tried-and-tested obsolete components. But now things seem to be swinging towards the opposite end of the scale.

Author: The Fonecast
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I want a mobile wallet - and I want it NOW!

Mark Bridge writes:

A few months ago James wrote about the slow adoption of mobile and contactless payments in the UK. Now we hear that Kenya’s M-PESA mobile money transfer service has arrived here. Yes, m-payments are finally going mainstream in the United Kingdom. Well, sort of. Well, alright, not at all really. What’s happened is that people in the UK are now able to send money to M-PESA users in Kenya. But what about the progress of mobile payments in the UK?

Author: The Fonecast
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Which mobile operating system will top the charts at Christmas?

James Rosewell writes:

It seems to be accepted that the Apple iPhone will be the top selling mobile phone this Christmas now it’s available on almost every UK network. The more interesting question is which handsets will hold the number 2 to 5 positions - and what operating system will they be running when the smartphone scores are announced in the new year?

Microsoft announced Windows Phone last week and I commented on the importance of persuading their heartland fans to move from iPhone and other platforms to Windows Phone. Disappointingly, finding a mobile retailer willing to sell a Windows Phone is not easy at the moment. Orange tell me they’ve withdrawn the one model they were going to offer from Toshiba. Vodafone didn’t even know what a Windows Phone was.

Author: The Fonecast
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Life is toooo complicated!

Iain Graham writes:

I have just bought (well, been given) a new mobile phone!  It, of course, cost me nothing, because we still haven't learnt in this industry, but it came with the now obligatory, shrink-wrapped, 140-page instruction manual on how to use it!!  A perfect cure for insomnia!  I read the opening page or two and it might as well have been written in Serbo-Croatian for all the sense it made to me!!  (I then realised it WAS written in Serbo-Croatian and so I turned to the correct language section) and it was just as incomprehensible!

Even worse, the manufacturers (who are too tight to pay for the printing in the name of 'going green') put the instruction manual on a CD!!

Author: The Fonecast
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