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Motorola's Handset Strategy - Wireless Turkeys 2008

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Why is it a turkey?

Motorola started the year by confirming that it was considering spinning off its mobile devices business entirely. The company's prospects did not improve as the year went on. The first quarter saw Motorola post a $194 million loss as it shipped 27.4 million units. In the second quarter, the company posted a $4 million profit, but revenue dropped 7.4 percent to $8.08 billion, and the company's handset business continued to struggle.

In early August Motorola named former Qualcomm executive Sanjay Jha co-CEO and head its handset division. Jha was tasked with turning the flailing business around. The company's entrée into the smartphone market in the wake of the iPhone 3G was the Krave ZN4, which it billed as both a touchscreen phone and a flip phone.  But excitement over the phone could not disguise problems with the company's handset strategy, and Motorola reported a $397 million third quarter loss, including an $840 million loss in the handset division. Jha said Motorola would focus on low-tier devices as well as mid-to-high tier devices based on Google's Android platform and Windows Mobile.

Yet Samsung passed Motorola in the third quarter as the top handset maker in the United States for the first time. To top off a year of bad news for the handset division, the Motorola RAZR lost its spot as the top-selling U.S. consumer handset in the quarter to the iPhone 3G, according to the NPD Group. The fact that the RAZR had been the top phone for 12 straight quarters and no other Motorola phone had been at the top laid bare Motorola's lack of innovation, especially in the post-iPhone era.      

More stories about windows mobile   Sanjay Jha   Qualcomm   Motorola RAZR   Krave   iPhone   Handsets   Google   3G  

Comments

And don't forget, the Motorola board of directors are turkeys too. They have presided over the executive management hires and goof ups for years. The board and execs are a classic case study of business screw ups. I can see the HBS headline: "Motorola - How to Fail in a Growing Market - the 7 Secrets of Governance Gone Wild." The crazy thing is Mr. Jha will get $30 million in 2010, even if he fails. Yep...the board approved it.

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