Nokia Crisis
Nokia Crisis
Prepared by:
Mohammad Mohsen Ahmad Kamal El-Deen
Noor Makki
Hany Lotfy
Ahmad Ezzat
Contents:
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Stock Price
In 2008, Nokia did well. A few years earlier, Nokia was about 40+ percent
of the world's handset market. At its best, the Symbian platform, which was
the Nokia smartphone operating system, had over 70 percent market
share in the world until iPhone and Android devices came from behind and
bypassed the Nokia platforms. That started the decline of the Nokia
business so that, come 2012, the situation was dark, and the press was
speculating on the timing of Nokia's bankruptcy. It was not if; it was when.
In September 2013 Microsoft had acquired Nokia at the price of 3.79 billion
euros (about 5 billion dollars), and buy Nokia’s patent license with 1.65
billion euros (about 2.18 billion dollars) in addition, so the total price of the
transaction was about 5.44 billion euros (about 7.17 billion dollars). Once
the transaction was completed, 32,000 employees of Nokia, including 4700
employees in Finland and about 18,300 manufacturing employees, would
join Microsoft; Microsoft would get Nokia’s department of device and
service, including mobile phones, smart devices and the leading design
team.
When in the past it had been them coming up with ideas that people
laughed at before fully adopting, this time it was someone else. Steve
Jobs. No buttons on his phone, just a screen that you touch and swipe,
and not just a phone but everything; your life, the love of your life “
New Trends in mobile smartphones
Introduction of Capacitive Touch Screens
Introduction of iOS by Apple and Android by Google
Online entertainment platforms offering users experiences which digitalized
the benefits of desktop or classic access while take advantage of High
internet Bandwidth, ex. (online casinos, MMORG, Streaming Services)
Competition vs Nokia
Developers such as Apple and Samsung had learned from Nokia’s success, and
put their own twist on these devices to move them ahead.
A significant part of this came from the adoption of better operating systems.
Android and iOS were far more flexible than Nokia's Symbian OS, making them a
better fit for the age of mobile internet.
Android and iOS Continued to evolve and improve introducing yearly updates
and features that kept customers engaged and loyal.
North America Market Ignorance
Nokia ignored America. The company simply refused to compete energetically
and respectfully in the U.S. America was treated as an innovation afterthought.
Nokia tried to get away with preserving its market dominance in Europe and
growing its leadership in Asia. The richest country in the world was, literally and
figuratively, a third-class priority for the Finnish giant.
Nokia Suffering
Nokia has suffered a series of attacks since 2012. It has been pressed by many events,
including several land- mark events Nokia announced 10,000 layoffs globally on June
15, 2012
Nokia sold headquarters building at 17 million euro on December 5, 2012.
What was the reaction of Nokia?
Nokia Research and development (R&D)
Nokia had dismissed touchscreens as a gimmick that used too much
battery. After which they were playing catchup and they didn’t ever
manage it. Their market share eroded.
Nokia’s development process was long dominated by hardware engineers;
software experts were marginalized. (Executives at Apple, in stark contrast, saw
hardware and software as equally important parts of a whole; they encouraged
employees to work in multidisciplinary teams to design products.)
What Nokia was unable to do, though, was translate all that R&D spending into
products that people actually wanted to buy.
Nokia 2019
Nokia (HMD)