Ask a European about Nokia and a faraway look will come into their
eye, a wistful tone creep into their voice. During the late 1990s and
early 2000s the 147-year-old Finnish company became a global technology
star: the world’s No. 1 mobile maker and the first brand of phone
everyone owned. In some emerging markets, so the story goes, the word
‘Nokia’ became a generic term for ‘mobile phone.’ But becoming
synonymous with phones is where it all went wrong.
There can be little doubt that Nokia’s mobile glory days are behind it. Korean electronics giant
Samsung now occupies the once Mighty Finn’s former throne at the top of the global mobile tree, while
Google’s Android OS is the dominant smartphone platform (Android overtook Nokia’s legacy smartphone OS Symbian at the end of 2010, according to
Canalys). In Q3 this year, Android was on an average of three out of every four smartphones sold worldwide (
IDC’s figure). In October,
IDC also noted
Nokia’s exit from its top five global smartphone vendors – the first time the Finnish company had dropped out of the top five since IDC started tracking vendors in 2004.
Even if Nokia’s strategy of switching from its legacy smartphone platform, Symbian, to Microsoft’s Windows Phone OS —
a strategy it outed
in February 2011
— ends up being relatively successful, in terms of profitability and
device shipments, the company will never hold sway over the industry as
it once did. Now it’s just a passenger on Microsoft’s train. However
many fancy apps Nokia adds to Windows Phone, the underlying platform is
directed in Redmond, not Espoo.
Title : Innovate Or Die: Nokia’s Long-Drawn-Out Decline
Description : Ask a European about Nokia and a faraway look will come into their eye, a wistful tone creep into their voice. During the late 1990s and ...