Two articles were published today that everyone should read. The first, from Reuters,
says that analysts have come to the conclusion that Nokia is no longer
the leader of the mobile phone market in terms of volume. Yesterday the Finnish handset maker issued a press release
saying they shipped 12 million smartphones and 71 feature phones in Q1
2012; that’s 83 million total. Samsung on the other hand, while they
haven’t announced their numbers yet, is widely expected to beat that 83
million figure by at least a few million. The second article, from
Horace Dediu at Asymco, explains how Samsung actually overtook Nokia.
The answer might surprise you, but it’s fairly obvious once you stop
and think about it: smartphones. Whereas Nokia’s ratio of smartphones
sold compared to feature phones sold peaked in Q3 2010 and then started
falling slowly, all of Samsung’s growth started happening during the
quarter when they began shipping smartphones powered by Google’s Android
operating system. In other words, Nokia might have pioneered the
smartphone space, but it was Samsung who dominated it in terms of
volume. Apple dominates the industry in terms of profits, but that’s
another story altogether.
First, Nokia is going to sell a lot of their patents to stay afloat. Microsoft will likely be buying them. Second, Nokia will sell their mapping unit, the one that they paid $8.1 billion for back in October 2007. And third, Nokia will get rid of at least another 10% of their workforce, so roughly 5,500 jobs
Via intomobile.com.
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