Nokia Issues Profit Warning Amidst Marketing Criticism
Nokia has issued a
profit warning for its devices and services division, blaming strong
competition from smartphone kings like Apple and Samsung.
The troubled Finnish firm said it believed operating margin for
the first quarter 2012 was approximately negative 3 percent, whereas it had
expected to break even. Nokia expects
similar results in the second quarter.
Stephen Elop, President and CEO of Nokia said the results
indicated Nokia is still “in the midst of transition”, although he pointed to
the success of the company’s Lumia devices as a high point.
Lacking Lumia love?
“Within our Smart Devices business unit, we have established early
momentum with Lumia, and we are increasing our investments in Lumia to achieve
market success. Our operator and distributor partners are providing solid
support for Windows Phone as a third ecosystem, as evidenced most recently by
the launch of the Lumia 900 by AT&T in the United States,” Elop said.
The rollout of Lumia 900 phones has already been hit by a software
flaw that would prevent some users connecting to mobile data networks. Nokia pledged to give customers
$100 credit, effectively
wiping out the $99 purchase price that many users see after subsidizing the
handset with a two-year contract with AT&T.
Nokia sold 12 million smartphone units in the first quarter,
making the company €1.7 billion in net sales. Overall, the vendor’s devices and
services division made €4.2 billion.
Last year, Nokia shocked the market when it completely cancelled
its 2011 sales outlook. Last month, it was confirmed that another 1,000 workers would be
made redundant in Finland.
Gartner analyst, Carolina Milanesi, told TechWeekEurope that Lumia
sales were not growing fast enough.
“Volume for Lumia is ramping up slowly – only two million in Q1,
which is not enough to make up for the decline in volume of Symbian,”
Milanesi added. “We said last quarter that Nokia needed US and China to drive
Lumia sales to start seeing a difference in the overall performance and this
proved to be the case.
“It also seems that Nokia is feeling pressure in the mobile phones
market as cheap Android products are hitting the streets in markets such as
India and China. While Asha has been successful in the very low end, it is the
mid-tier that I feel is under pressure where Symbian has left a gap and Lumia
has not moved in yet.”
Milanesi said that in the US, Nokia needed to get Verizon on board
so it “can fire on all cylinders at the two key carriers”.
Marketing muck up?
Despite gaining positive reviews for its Lumia devices, Nokia has
been unable to attract swathes of new customers. Some have put this down to
weak marketing, something Windows Phone 7 maker Microsoft may have to take
blame for too.
“Something is not quite right on the retail and marketing push on
these devices, whether that is Nokia’s or Microsoft’s role. They both have to
take responsibility for pushing these things,” Tony Cripps, analyst at Ovum,
told TechWeekEurope.
“It’s going to be an expensive thing to push as hard as Nokia
needs to. It is that retail and marketing push we need to see from them… There
are some indications Nokia and Microsoft need to be working more closely.
“2012 is going to be critical for companies like Nokia and RIM
because the financial community needs to see some signs they are getting back
on track.”
Cripps said Nokia may be biding its time until it has a broader
portfolio before it goes ahead with another major marketing push.
In the UK, Nokia is currently flogging the Lumia 800 and the
Lumia 710, in terms of its Windows Phone 7 output. The Lumia 900 is expected to
arrive on 27 April.
The low end Nokia Asha has just
launched in Kenya under the QWERTY generation slogan and it seems to be
targeting the youth. The phone retails at between KES 10K to 16K and the
campaign seems to be quit on track. This is bound to be quit a success as far as
I am concerned but Samsung is still the main player to beat.
hi,
ReplyDeleteIs the Lumia 900 available in Nairobi?
Its possible to get it. Get in touch with this guy mbuguafrancis@gmail.com
ReplyDelete