Title: Its tough being
1Its tough being 1
- Jill Alvidrez, MBA
- Peimin Chi, EECS
- Nipul Chokshi, MBA
- Sarang Dalal, BioE
- Steve Sinha, EECS
- Rahul Shah, EECS
- Nancy Suh, MBA
2Its Tough Being 1
- No, really, it is!
- Overview of US Handset market
- Value Chain Market Characteristics
- Outlook Key Decisions
- Recommendations
- Opportunities/Risks
3Handset Market Value Chain
Consumers
Handset Makers
Nokia Motorola Ericsson Siemens Samsung Others
Motorola Phillips Texas Instr. Qualcomm Cypress RF
Microdevices Others
ATT Wireless Sprint PCS Cingular Verizon
Wireless Voicestream Others
Consumers dont buy directly from Nokia
4Handset Sales Volume (in mil)
Merrill Lynch Research, April 2001
5Nokia US Market Share
Only 2.9 of CDMA market
64.4 of GSM/TDMA market
Source Info-tech Trends
6Key marketing strategy
- Respond to consumers preferences
- Lindholm team engineers, graphic designers,
psychologists, sociologists, and a theater
director to study human behavior - Well-designed, high-quality, technologically
advanced - all in a user-friendly package
- Year 1992 CEO sheds chunks of Nokia business to
focus on mobile telecommunications - Pricing Strategy
- Lower price on most popular models
- Avoid price wars
7Nokias Outlook Two Extremes
BEST
- End of growth phase
- Mobile data services ? difficult intro
continues - No emergence of single standard
- Commoditization of handset
- Voice traffic will cont. to be robust
- GPRS always on will be key enabler and driver
of data-driven services - Maintain cost leadership
- Sustain brand equity (e.g., Nike, Intel)
8Key Decisions Facing Nokia
- Push and pull marketing
- First-time and replacement markets
- Consumers and businesses (TBD)
- Voice and data markets
- CDMA and GSM/TDMA markets
9Resist Commoditization by Push and Pull Marketing
PUSH
Employer
Service Provider
Nokia
Customer
Retailer
PULL
10Global New vs. Replacement Phones
Source Merrill Lynch April 2001
11Focus on Replacement Market
- Replacement market increasingly important
- Penetration rate grows
- Replacement cycle is shortening
- Replacement determined not only by demand but
also by supply - Reasons to trade-in size and battery life
- People are more savvy, they want more features
and accessories
12Risk Factors
- Economic slowdown? Slowing subscriber growth
- Replacement market weaker than anticipated
- Still mostly driven by voice data services not
rich/easy enough to use yet to encourage
replacement buys - Average holding time
- Globally just under 2 years (Merrill Lynch 2001)
13Data-driven Services Opportunities to partner
with Content Providers
- Demonstrate value of a feature-rich handset
- Partner with AOL/Amazon/Yahoo/MSN to deliver
their content over NOK handsets - Note that SPs have to agree to the scheme to
allow users access to content - Probably the long-shot opportunity
14Long-term Focus on CDMA market in US
- CDMA represents another growth opportunity
- MOT lost market share to NOK b/c they were slow
on converting from analog to digital - Establish market share leadership in CDMA sales
- Current market leader is Samsung (21.7)
- Nokias share is 2.9
- Aggressively pursue partnerships with CDMA
service providers - Sprint PCS
- Verizon Wireless
15Conclusion
- Resist commoditization!
- Continue building brand
- Understanding customer needs
- Forging industry alliances
- Bring new products to market
- Replacement market
- Data-driven
- Long-term
- Shift technology from TDMA ? CDMA
16Appendix
17US Market Penetration
Percent
Source Merrill Lynch, April 2001
18Competition
- Partnerships attempt to overtake Nokia in 3G race
- All competitors have weaker TDMA sales than Nokia
19Nokias Road to market leadership
20Nokias Current StrategyTechnology Design
- Year 1990 Industry Benchmarks
- Nokia 2110 Large screen, clean design, easy UI
- Year 1995 Frank Nuovo, Chief Designer
- Product Design with a Competitive Edge
- Customizable rings and covers
- Elliptical Designs
- Year 2000 Effective Segmentation
- Nokia 6250 Rugged durable
- Nokia 8890 Sophisticated metal case
- Nokia 3300 Colorful models
- Watching customers in action, in traffic, at
work, etc.
21Nokias Current Strategy The importance of the
brand
- Is the handset industry following in the
footsteps - of the PC industry?
Nokia argues no. Were selling branded
consumer goods, not a commodity.
22Nokias Current Strategy Brand Connecting
People
- 5th most valuable brand
- Value Proposition
- Cutting edge communications technology designed
around individual human needs - Differentiation
- Positioned as fashion accessory
- Personification of the brand
- young, sexy, sophisticated, hip and generally
with it. - Ericsson is an austere, conservative,
middle-aged Swedish engineer.
23Nokias Current Strategy Tactics
- Aggressive advertising and promotions
- Cut through clutter with exclusive sponsorships
- Brand the ring
- High profile events
- Club Nokia
- Customer care and feeding
- Classlink Programs
- Focus on youth and education
24Nokia Leverages competitors failures
- Motorola
- Analog lost to Nokias early digital phones
- Late to leverage partnerships with service
providers - Ericsson
- Weak branding price wars
- Widely regarded as unfashionable (but has
recently partnered with Sony, whose brand is
associated with strong design) - Contract manufacturing to Flextronics, Singapore