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Nokia 'on a burning platform - CEO warns. May sack 50% of management team

hahaho

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Nokia 'on a burning platform,' CEO warns in memo
AFP - Thursday, February 10

Elop intends to seriously shake up the company.

HELSINKI (AFP) - – World-leading mobile phone company Nokia is "standing on a burning platform," surrounded by a "blazing fire" of competition, new company head Stephen Elop said in an internal memo obtained by AFP Wednesday.

Elop's memo paints a picture of a man on a burning platform who must take the drastic move of plunging into icy waters in order to save himself, adding that the company must now make a similar radical choice.

"In ordinary circumstances, the man would never consider plunging into icy waters. But these were not ordinary times -- his platform was on fire... We too, are standing on a 'burning platform,' and we must decide how we are going to change our behaviour," Elop wrote.

The memo is a scathing indictment of Nokia's "non-competitive" operating system Symbian, a lack of accountability and leadership, painfully slow product delivery, a lack of internal collaboration and a general "series of misses".

The Finnish company was once the juggernaut of the mobile world, with a 40 percent share in the mobile device market as recently at the second quarter of 2008.

That figure has been sliding ever since, hitting just 31 percent in the fourth quarter of 2010.

Although Nokia refused to officially comment on internal communications, a company source told AFP the memo was genuine, and was sent to employees last week.

"We have more than one explosion -- we have multiple points of scorching heat that are fuelling a blazing fire around us," continued Canadian Elop, who took over as the first non-Finnish CEO last September.

With this brutally honest appraisal of the company's woes, Elop appeared to be sowing the ground for a spectacular shake-up of corporate strategy, which he is expected to unveil on Friday during the company's strategy and financial briefing in London.

"When we share the new strategy on February 11, it will be a huge effort to transform our company," he wrote.

Ahead of the big day, there have been a flurry of rumours about what to expect, including a report by German weekly WirtschaftsWoche that Elop plans to sack half of Nokia's management.

Elop berated the fact that Nokia still does not have a product that can come close to the experience offered by Apple's iPhone.

In the low-end range, he pointed to Chinese companies who crank out cheap devices faster than Nokia "can polish a PowerPoint presentation."

Most telling is Elop's description of the "ecosystems" of rival mobile phone operating platforms, especially Google's Android, which surpassed Symbian in December as the most-shipped smartphone platform according to market research group Canalys.

"Our competitors aren't taking our market share with devices; they are taking our market share with an entire ecosystem. This means we're going to have to decide how we either build, catalyse or join an ecosystem," wrote Elop.

During a conference call with analysts after annual results, Elop praised Symbian and said the company had high hopes for the platform.

"It's one of the few assets the company has in software, even though it's not perfect... but even so, it's one of the better things they have going," Nordea analyst Sami Sarkamies told AFP.

Even so, speculation has been frenzied that Elop would choose some kind of co-operation with Android particularly in the North American market where Symbian is on shaky footing.

Another possibility, says Sarkamies, is that Nokia will abandon its newer high-end smartphone platform MeeGo entirely, which had failed to materialise in new products despite intensive development.

Elop wrote in his missive that he did not doubt Nokia's "brilliant sources of innovation", but said the problem was in bringing these innovations to the market -- a sentiment which has been repeated by analysts for years.

"Symbian3 came one quarter late, and we're still waiting for the first software updates even though the products have been on the markets for four months now. If you look from the outside, too little seems to come out of the company, and it's coming out too slowly," said Sarkamies.

All in all, the memo seems to confirm what market watchers have been saying since the industry giant revealed in its annual report that it still hasn't stopped bleeding out market share to its competitors: on Friday, Elop intends to seriously shake up the company.
 

Dreamer1

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Nokia seems to be the ERISSON of yesterday.What to do?Fast changing market!
They have to concentarte in TABLET


Global Tablet Shipments to Rise by Factor of 12 by 2015
February 4, 2011
Rhoda Alexander
Global shipments of tablets—a segment consisting of media tablets like Apple Inc.’s iPad as well as PC-type tablets—are set to rise to 242.3 million units in 2015, up by a factor of more than 12 from 2010, new IHS iSuppli research indicates.
Media tablet shipments will grow to more than 202 million units in 2015, up from 17.4 million in 2010. Shipments of PC-type tablets—i.e., tablets that have full PC functionality implemented via PC operating systems—will climb to 39.3 million units in 2015, up from 2.3 million in 2010.

Total shipments of tablets will amount to 242.3 million units in 2015, up from the newly finalized IHS iSuppli estimate of 19.7 million in 2010.

.

“The remarkable expansion of the tablet market from 2010 to 2015 will be driven by three successive waves of growth,” said Rhoda Alexander, director of monitor research at IHS. “The first wave, which is hitting in 2010 and 2011, was created by the arrival of the iPad and the ensuing tsunami of demand for the device. The second wave, arriving in 2011 and 2012, will be propelled by a deluge of iPad competitors, particularly Android-based models. The third wave, which will turn up in 2013, will consist of a flood of models based on the Windows operating system that will expand the reach of tablets into traditional computer markets.”

While the iPad will lead annual tablet shipments through 2012, the increasing strength of media-tablet rivals combined with the advent of PC-type platforms will cause Apple to lose its majority of total unit shipments starting in 2013.

Wave Hello to iPad
Prior to the introduction of the iPad in 2010, the tablet market represented a sleepy niche of the mobile PC market, with small volumes, negligible growth, and sales limited to small group of users in professional markets. Shipments of these PC-type tablets amounted to less than 2 million units in 2009. The arrival of the iPad changed all that, helping tablet sales surge by a factor of 10 in 2010.

The iPad’s huge head start both in unit share and ecosystem development will allow it to maintain its market dominance in 2011 and throughout most of 2012 despite the influx of competitors.


Android Ahoy
New model introductions in 2011 and 2012 will continue to boost iPad volumes and allow Apple to maintain a premium for its newest models. However, Apple will face increasing price competition from competing media tablets, many of them incorporating the Android operating system. Some of those tablets will enter the market with features more comparable—or in some cases, superior—to the current version of the iPad. Furthermore, Google is spearheading an effort to speed development of tablet-oriented content for Android-based devices.

“At least three of the major Android tablets released at the Consumer Electronics Show in January featured built-in support for a 4G wireless communications technology: long-term evolution (LTE),” said Francis Sideco, principal analyst, wireless communications at IHS. “With iPad only supporting 3G for now, it will be interesting to see the outcome of the battle pitting the allure of technology—i.e. LTE—against the appeal of usability—i.e. the iPad’s benchmark user friendliness.”

Aside from the LTE differentiator, Google also is spearheading an effort to speed development of tablet-oriented content and the user interface for Android based devices.


The Rising Tide of PC Tablets
By 2013, the iPad will decline to less than 50 percent of overall tablet shipments, as it faces the double jeopardy of increasing competition from Android-based tablets combined with the rise of devices using PC operating systems, possibly including some from Apple.

“The year 2013 will mark a critical juncture, as the tablet market turns into a battleground between media tablets using mobile operating systems, and PC-type tablets employing the Windows operating system,” Alexander said. “Add to this mix the competition from ever-improving smart phones, and the mobile device market will get very interesting.”

Microsoft likely will introduce a tablet-oriented version of its Windows operating system in late 2012 or in 2013 that not only will be better suited to touch-screen applications, but also will allow for content-creation tasks. The expected expansion of the current consumption-oriented media tablets to incorporate more creation applications is placing growing pressure on traditional low-end mobile PCs, and the existing Windows solutions are struggling to gain traction in the tablet market.

“Microsoft and the PC makers will engage in a vicious battle to fight off the ongoing share grab from media tablets, even as many of these vendors offer media tablet solutions of their own,” Alexander said. “Expect to see a blend of slates, convertibles and dual- and potentially tri-screen solutions as alternatives to the media tablet onslaught.”

The wide variety of solutions—and intense battle among operating systems and types of platforms—will continue to fuel the expansion of the tablet market in 2014 and 2015.
 
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Ash007

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Nokia for many years has been resting on their laurels. It was fine when no one else in the Mobile phone space was a big threat to them. Until the Iphone arrives. That changed the whole perception that "smart" phones are for consumers as well not just the crackberry biz sphere.
 

tonychat

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Generous Asset
They ought to do something like the iphone in order to get the consumer's attention. Now the consumers has been too used to use phone the iphone way. The only brand that can take on iphone is HTC and its andriod OS.

Nokia should do something in this trend.
 

tonychat

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Generous Asset
Nokia/Motorola/SonyE all will soon phase out.

They will not if the do the iphone style. Consumers are too used in using the phone this way. The button style phone are similar to those above 40 year olds sinkie mentality.
 

gbomega

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Better for them to drop Meego platform since they cannot deliver and concentrate on Android and Windows Phone and then built its own eco system using their OVI web services.
 

maxpark

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From personal experience, Nokia has always been the go-to brand for myself and most people around me for the last 15-20 years... until the last couple of years when they started to introduce the Symbian system.
Frankly, it sucked big big time and always have some kind of software problem or it hangs on you, etc...
This plus the fact that their customer service response is out-of-this-world non-responsive and super bochap/cannot help attitude (at that time, now dont know and dont care) finally pushed me to switch to Iphone... and I've never looked back, thank God for Apple!

Many other people I know have similar experiences with Nokia... surely the fallen and still falling... its good that the new CEO is kicking butts but it will take a HUGE sea change of improvements before I'll ever consider a Nokia again...
 

cheekenpie

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Nokia_8850.jpg


Remember this baby? Was retailing for $999 back in late 90s.
 

Ash007

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I'm using this still

150px-Nokia_8800.png


Nokia old phones are still the best. I consider switching to Iphone a few times, but still remain faithful to mine to this day.
 

johnny333

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Asset
Nokia old phones are still the best. I consider switching to Iphone a few times, but still remain faithful to mine to this day.

For a simple phone, my preference is for Sony Ericson over Nokia, The SE design is smaller & more elegant & portability is more important to me.

I'm happy with my SE W810i, all these years & it's been trouble free & still looks the same as when I bought it as it's got a metal body.

Iphones are over kill for some people like me, I'd rather use the $$ to buy Apple shares:smile:
 

red amoeba

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Asset
I'm using this still

150px-Nokia_8800.png


Nokia old phones are still the best. I consider switching to Iphone a few times, but still remain faithful to mine to this day.


==
bro...if one day u decide to give up this phone, let me know...i lost mine some years back ...really miss this phone.

I am still holding to a Nokia phone, in fact i am a Nokia fan from day 1. Unfortunately, I have decided the next phone won't be a Nokia. They seriously have lost their edge. Previously, their phones are items of desire. And I remembered throwing all my money into their phones - including this one - which retailed for nearly 1K.

I also got myself the other one- the one posted by Cheeken pie...for me till today, is the icon of Nokia phone....
 

Ash007

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Loyal
==
bro...if one day u decide to give up this phone, let me know...i lost mine some years back ...really miss this phone.

I am still holding to a Nokia phone, in fact i am a Nokia fan from day 1. Unfortunately, I have decided the next phone won't be a Nokia. They seriously have lost their edge. Previously, their phones are items of desire. And I remembered throwing all my money into their phones - including this one - which retailed for nearly 1K.

I also got myself the other one- the one posted by Cheeken pie...for me till today, is the icon of Nokia phone....

Indeed, the Nokia 8800 and 8100 are the ultimate Beng phone. When I first got mine, people say its dumb, no 3g, no this no that, compared to the n95. I persisted and got it, it has lasted close to 5 years to me now. I think its an item worth spending. The people that brought N95, all not using theirs now. :smile:

Nokia still manufacture the 8800, there is even a 24K gold version. Why not get a brand new one instead?
 

moolightaffairs

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
I'm using this still

150px-Nokia_8800.png


Nokia old phones are still the best. I consider switching to Iphone a few times, but still remain faithful to mine to this day.

wow! i still keep this and its still laying around somewhere in my drawer. another one i got is 8810. using 5800 now, lousy phone!:mad: regret buying it. thought of changing to xperia arc.
 

Rogue Trader

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Even so, speculation has been frenzied that Elop would choose some kind of co-operation with Android particularly in the North American market where Symbian is on shaky footing.

They should have built alliances with Android instead of stubbornly sticking on to Symbian OS. Now they have to catch up with SE, Motorola and the slew of korean brands.
 

singveld

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Asset
yeah sack those useless finnish managers, apple announce iphone in 2007 and they sit at their comfortable chair and do nothing. Iphone change everything. You just have to hold the phone in your hand for the first time, and you know. I bought the first version from USA to use in singapore.

I also must add that their vertu phones are stupid.
 
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