Description
In the highly competitive $3 billion mobile phone market in India,
Nokia has managed to make its brand the phone of choice for
millions. It currently has a market share of over 70 per cent.
Abhijit Joshi tracks the Finnish company's strategy for success.
59
In The Top Spot
In the highly competitive $3 billion mobile phone market in India,
Nokia has managed to make its brand the phone of choice for
millions. It currently has a market share of over 70 per cent.
Abhijit Joshi tracks the Finnish company's strategy for success.
W
hen mobile phones were
introduced in India in the
mid-90s, US based
Motorola, Sweden's
Ericsson and Finland's Nokia dominated
the handset market in India. Over the
years, the old order has changed. Asian
players like Samsung and LG, European
brands Philips and Siemens now compete
with Motorola and Sony-Ericsson.
However, Nokia has been able to race
ahead of all other players to become the
leading mobile handset maker across the
world. In India its dominance is even more
pronounced with a 70 per cent market
share, compared to around 30 per cent
globally. Its closest rival in the Indian mar-
ket, Samsung, comes a poor second with
less than 10 per cent market share.
Its business strategy, management
style and marketing savvy have earned it
the respect of its peers. In 2004, Nokia
was chosen as 'the most respected con-
sumer durables company' in India by the
weekly magazine BusinessWorld.
The reasons for Nokia's stupendous
success in India include amazing branding,
a focussed marketing exercise and distribu-
tion strength, among others. Sanjeev
Sharma, CEO, Nokia India, says, “An
extensive product range, anticipating con-
sumer trends early — we were the first to
introduce a phone for the fashion segment,
the 8210 — a retail strategy that ensures
consumers across the country get a consis-
tent experience and an excellent staff, all
put together, clicked for Nokia.”
Nokia's commitment to the Indian con-
sumer was underscored when it became
the first, and only, handset major to devel-
op a model suited for Indian conditions.
The company launched two models, 1100
and 1108, after intensive research on the
A DISTRIBUTION NETWORK DOUBLE THAT OF ITS RIVALS: Nokia’s Sanjeev Sharma
Strategy
strategy nokia story-new.qxp 30/1105 11:46 AM Page 59
60
Indian customer's specific needs. The
phones gave an integrated torch, a sheath-
covered keypad for dust protection and a
slip-free grip. The phones were also intro-
duced in other markets in Asia and Africa.
Nokia's first ‘Made for India’ model, the
1100, is the largest selling model in the
Indian GSM handset market.
The five largest selling handset models
in the market are all Nokia's. Besides, the
company today has a substantial share of
both ends of the market. It has 77 per cent
of the $66-$88 phone market and about
68 per cent of the over $330 phone
market.
In a marketing first, in March this year
Nokia opened a dedicated Concept Store
which features the full range of Nokia
products including handsets, mobile
enhancements, ring tones, graphics,
games, software and exclusive Nokia mer-
chandise. The products allow clients to
experience the newest applications such as
gaming, imaging and e-mail support
amongst others.
I
n its marketing endeavours, Nokia has
ensured that its advertising ensures its
phones stand out from the clutter of mobile
phone advertising. “Our advertising is
aimed at making communication relevant
to strengthen consumer-connect with the
brand,” says Sanjay Behl, head of market-
ing, Nokia India.
Nokia has not used the pricing plank for
marketing its phones. However, it did
adopt an aggressive pricing strategy to
fight the grey market, successfully. Initially
the grey market accounted for 80 per cent
of the mobile phone sales due to a huge
price differential between the legally
imported and the grey market phones.
Even as the government slashed duties
to reduce the scope of arbitrage, Nokia and
other handset players too reduced their
prices to induce the consumer to buy a
phone from the authorised phone shops.
Today, the grey market comprises
less than 20 per cent of the total handset
market.
As part of its distribution strategy,
Nokia has ensured that it has a presence in
all 2,000 cities and towns that have cellu-
lar coverage. Nokia's distribution network
of over 30,000 outlets is roughly double
that of its rivals, according to industry
sources.
The other edge that Nokia has over its
rivals is the large portfolio of phones.
Unlike other consumer durables, a mobile
phone is a style statement much like the
wristwatch. The design, style and colour
elements play an important role when con-
sumers are choosing a phone. Today it has
the largest range of handset models to
choose from. Nokia has introduced phones
at all price points, right from the mass mar-
ket entry-level phones to the mid-market
colour and camera phones and also the
high-end exclusive phones.
“Nokia empowers the consumer in that
it offers a choice of more than one phone
at every price point,” says Kobita Desai,
principal analyst, telecom, with research
firm, Gartner. “Thus, in the mid-market
range, you can have a phone suited for the
corporate types while another would be
aimed at techno-loving teenagers.”
Nokia lost its edge when GSM's rival
technology, CDMA, made its entry in
2003. That was because the Finnish major
had concentrated on GSM technology and
THE LARGEST RANGE OF CELL PHONES: A Nokia store displays a gamut of accessories
Nokia 71
Samsung 10
Sony Ericsson 10
Motorola 3
LG 3
Others 3
All figures represent percentages. Source: ORG GFK
Market Share GSM Mobiles
STRATEGY
strategy nokia story-new.qxp 30/1105 11:46 AM Page 60
61
STRATEGY
was losing ground to CDMA handset mak-
ers like Samsung and LG in India. The
Korean brands quickly established them-
selves after they tied up with CDMA oper-
ator Reliance Infocomm, which was
launching its services then and making a
big splash in the marketplace.
Nokia soon introduced several CDMA
models and it now has eight CDMA mod-
els out of its total of 40 models. The lack
of CDMA phones had seen Nokia's market
share falling from 50 per cent in 2002 to
just 22 per cent in 2003, the year Reliance
Infocomm launched its services in a big
way. It was only after Nokia gave a push
to CDMA phones in the Indian market did
its market share roll upwards again to 60
per cent in 2004 and an estimated 74 per
cent in 2005.
Shortly thereafter, Nokia was again
under siege, but this time it was interna-
tional. Nokia had concentrated on the
candy bar type of phones which were per-
ceived as ‘boring’ compared to the flip type
‘clamshell’ designed phones of rivals like
Samsung. Because of its innovative
designs, Samsung seemed to be gaining
ground as the mobile of choice when it
came to high-end colour and camera
phones. Around 2003, Samsung became
the highest selling phone in India in the
colour segment.
Industry analysts felt that the company
could only go down globally as it lost mar-
ket share to the newer players. The scene
looked bleak for Nokia. “We had a gap in
our product portfolio,” admitted Sharma.
However, the subsequent quick turn-
around of the mobile giant by the launch of
new clamshell models globally is probably
what legends are made of. A year on, and
the picture has changed totally. Nokia has
increased its market share in India from
around 55 per cent in October 2004 to
around 74 per cent in March 2005. It has
also become the number one player in the
colour phone segment.
W
ith net sales of $1.6 billion in 2004,
India contributes 4.5 per cent to
Nokia's revenues worldwide and is its fifth
largest market after the US, China, UK and
Germany. India's mobile market is growing
at the breakneck rate of over two million
mobiles a month and is widely expected to
cross 80 million customers by December.
According to estimates by analysts, 30 to
35 million handsets would be sold in the
$3 billion Indian cell phone market in 2005,
compared to the 17 million phones that
were sold in 2004.
India has emerged as a hot spot for
global handset and telecom gear manufac-
turers as low wireless penetration and the
cheapest call rates in the world are pulling
in users. “The market has seen tremendous
growth in the last three years. Compared
to net additions of 300,000 subscribers a
month in early 2002, we at Nokia are now
seeing additions of about 1.5 to 1.8 million
subscribers a month,” points out Sharma.
The growing importance of India led to
setting up a facility for handsets as well as
telecom infrastructure in India. Nokia has
announced an investment of approximate-
ly $150 million for the Sriperumbudur
handset facility in Tamil Nadu, the tenth
Nokia facility globally. It will be Nokia's
second largest production site in Asia, after
the China plant.
With less than 25 per cent of India hav-
ing cellular coverage, increasing the geo-
graphical coverage is the next step for
Sharma and his team at Nokia.
The telephone had not even been
invented when Fredrik Idestam first started
his toilet paper and rubber boot business on
the banks of the river Nokia in Finland. He
could hardly have guessed that over a cen-
tury later the company he started would be
synonymous with a futuristic gadget.
UNLIKE MOST OTHER mobile phone mak-
ers, Nokia's advertising strategies are
often aimed at the low end consumer. For
instance, the Made For India advertise-
ment for the Nokia 1100 is targeted at
the entry-level phone user. It showed the
mobile tied to the fender of a truck that
traverses the length of India. The implicit
message is that phone still works at the
end of the long, hot, dusty, journey.
Nokia's advertisements have dwelt on the
human angle of mobile technology, rather
than emphasise their technical aspects.
Localised communications has helped
reinforce the core brand strength of
“human technology that appeals to con-
sumers,” admits Sanjeev Sharma, CEO,
Nokia. The Har Jeb Mein Rang (colour in
every pocket) advertisement was created
keeping in mind a market aspiring to go
for colour displays.
As a market leader, Nokia's advertising
has also had to play the role of educator.
During the days when phones in the grey
market sold much more than legal
phones, Nokia undertook a campaign to
educate people about the advantages of
going legit.
Through its astute advertising, Nokia has
sometimes been perceived as being the
innovator even when it is not. It is not the
first handset maker to have Hindi text dis-
play for SMS, but its hardsell campaign
showing the Hindi text on a display has
enabled it to usurp this position in the
minds of the general consumer.
AIMED AT THE MASS MARKET
THE MARKET LEADER AS EDUCATOR: Advertising the human angle of mobile technology
On the Web
Nokia India: www.nokia.co.in
strategy nokia story-new.qxp 30/1105 11:46 AM Page 61
doc_135564165.pdf
In the highly competitive $3 billion mobile phone market in India,
Nokia has managed to make its brand the phone of choice for
millions. It currently has a market share of over 70 per cent.
Abhijit Joshi tracks the Finnish company's strategy for success.
59
In The Top Spot
In the highly competitive $3 billion mobile phone market in India,
Nokia has managed to make its brand the phone of choice for
millions. It currently has a market share of over 70 per cent.
Abhijit Joshi tracks the Finnish company's strategy for success.
W
hen mobile phones were
introduced in India in the
mid-90s, US based
Motorola, Sweden's
Ericsson and Finland's Nokia dominated
the handset market in India. Over the
years, the old order has changed. Asian
players like Samsung and LG, European
brands Philips and Siemens now compete
with Motorola and Sony-Ericsson.
However, Nokia has been able to race
ahead of all other players to become the
leading mobile handset maker across the
world. In India its dominance is even more
pronounced with a 70 per cent market
share, compared to around 30 per cent
globally. Its closest rival in the Indian mar-
ket, Samsung, comes a poor second with
less than 10 per cent market share.
Its business strategy, management
style and marketing savvy have earned it
the respect of its peers. In 2004, Nokia
was chosen as 'the most respected con-
sumer durables company' in India by the
weekly magazine BusinessWorld.
The reasons for Nokia's stupendous
success in India include amazing branding,
a focussed marketing exercise and distribu-
tion strength, among others. Sanjeev
Sharma, CEO, Nokia India, says, “An
extensive product range, anticipating con-
sumer trends early — we were the first to
introduce a phone for the fashion segment,
the 8210 — a retail strategy that ensures
consumers across the country get a consis-
tent experience and an excellent staff, all
put together, clicked for Nokia.”
Nokia's commitment to the Indian con-
sumer was underscored when it became
the first, and only, handset major to devel-
op a model suited for Indian conditions.
The company launched two models, 1100
and 1108, after intensive research on the
A DISTRIBUTION NETWORK DOUBLE THAT OF ITS RIVALS: Nokia’s Sanjeev Sharma
Strategy
strategy nokia story-new.qxp 30/1105 11:46 AM Page 59
60
Indian customer's specific needs. The
phones gave an integrated torch, a sheath-
covered keypad for dust protection and a
slip-free grip. The phones were also intro-
duced in other markets in Asia and Africa.
Nokia's first ‘Made for India’ model, the
1100, is the largest selling model in the
Indian GSM handset market.
The five largest selling handset models
in the market are all Nokia's. Besides, the
company today has a substantial share of
both ends of the market. It has 77 per cent
of the $66-$88 phone market and about
68 per cent of the over $330 phone
market.
In a marketing first, in March this year
Nokia opened a dedicated Concept Store
which features the full range of Nokia
products including handsets, mobile
enhancements, ring tones, graphics,
games, software and exclusive Nokia mer-
chandise. The products allow clients to
experience the newest applications such as
gaming, imaging and e-mail support
amongst others.
I
n its marketing endeavours, Nokia has
ensured that its advertising ensures its
phones stand out from the clutter of mobile
phone advertising. “Our advertising is
aimed at making communication relevant
to strengthen consumer-connect with the
brand,” says Sanjay Behl, head of market-
ing, Nokia India.
Nokia has not used the pricing plank for
marketing its phones. However, it did
adopt an aggressive pricing strategy to
fight the grey market, successfully. Initially
the grey market accounted for 80 per cent
of the mobile phone sales due to a huge
price differential between the legally
imported and the grey market phones.
Even as the government slashed duties
to reduce the scope of arbitrage, Nokia and
other handset players too reduced their
prices to induce the consumer to buy a
phone from the authorised phone shops.
Today, the grey market comprises
less than 20 per cent of the total handset
market.
As part of its distribution strategy,
Nokia has ensured that it has a presence in
all 2,000 cities and towns that have cellu-
lar coverage. Nokia's distribution network
of over 30,000 outlets is roughly double
that of its rivals, according to industry
sources.
The other edge that Nokia has over its
rivals is the large portfolio of phones.
Unlike other consumer durables, a mobile
phone is a style statement much like the
wristwatch. The design, style and colour
elements play an important role when con-
sumers are choosing a phone. Today it has
the largest range of handset models to
choose from. Nokia has introduced phones
at all price points, right from the mass mar-
ket entry-level phones to the mid-market
colour and camera phones and also the
high-end exclusive phones.
“Nokia empowers the consumer in that
it offers a choice of more than one phone
at every price point,” says Kobita Desai,
principal analyst, telecom, with research
firm, Gartner. “Thus, in the mid-market
range, you can have a phone suited for the
corporate types while another would be
aimed at techno-loving teenagers.”
Nokia lost its edge when GSM's rival
technology, CDMA, made its entry in
2003. That was because the Finnish major
had concentrated on GSM technology and
THE LARGEST RANGE OF CELL PHONES: A Nokia store displays a gamut of accessories
Nokia 71
Samsung 10
Sony Ericsson 10
Motorola 3
LG 3
Others 3
All figures represent percentages. Source: ORG GFK
Market Share GSM Mobiles
STRATEGY
strategy nokia story-new.qxp 30/1105 11:46 AM Page 60
61
STRATEGY
was losing ground to CDMA handset mak-
ers like Samsung and LG in India. The
Korean brands quickly established them-
selves after they tied up with CDMA oper-
ator Reliance Infocomm, which was
launching its services then and making a
big splash in the marketplace.
Nokia soon introduced several CDMA
models and it now has eight CDMA mod-
els out of its total of 40 models. The lack
of CDMA phones had seen Nokia's market
share falling from 50 per cent in 2002 to
just 22 per cent in 2003, the year Reliance
Infocomm launched its services in a big
way. It was only after Nokia gave a push
to CDMA phones in the Indian market did
its market share roll upwards again to 60
per cent in 2004 and an estimated 74 per
cent in 2005.
Shortly thereafter, Nokia was again
under siege, but this time it was interna-
tional. Nokia had concentrated on the
candy bar type of phones which were per-
ceived as ‘boring’ compared to the flip type
‘clamshell’ designed phones of rivals like
Samsung. Because of its innovative
designs, Samsung seemed to be gaining
ground as the mobile of choice when it
came to high-end colour and camera
phones. Around 2003, Samsung became
the highest selling phone in India in the
colour segment.
Industry analysts felt that the company
could only go down globally as it lost mar-
ket share to the newer players. The scene
looked bleak for Nokia. “We had a gap in
our product portfolio,” admitted Sharma.
However, the subsequent quick turn-
around of the mobile giant by the launch of
new clamshell models globally is probably
what legends are made of. A year on, and
the picture has changed totally. Nokia has
increased its market share in India from
around 55 per cent in October 2004 to
around 74 per cent in March 2005. It has
also become the number one player in the
colour phone segment.
W
ith net sales of $1.6 billion in 2004,
India contributes 4.5 per cent to
Nokia's revenues worldwide and is its fifth
largest market after the US, China, UK and
Germany. India's mobile market is growing
at the breakneck rate of over two million
mobiles a month and is widely expected to
cross 80 million customers by December.
According to estimates by analysts, 30 to
35 million handsets would be sold in the
$3 billion Indian cell phone market in 2005,
compared to the 17 million phones that
were sold in 2004.
India has emerged as a hot spot for
global handset and telecom gear manufac-
turers as low wireless penetration and the
cheapest call rates in the world are pulling
in users. “The market has seen tremendous
growth in the last three years. Compared
to net additions of 300,000 subscribers a
month in early 2002, we at Nokia are now
seeing additions of about 1.5 to 1.8 million
subscribers a month,” points out Sharma.
The growing importance of India led to
setting up a facility for handsets as well as
telecom infrastructure in India. Nokia has
announced an investment of approximate-
ly $150 million for the Sriperumbudur
handset facility in Tamil Nadu, the tenth
Nokia facility globally. It will be Nokia's
second largest production site in Asia, after
the China plant.
With less than 25 per cent of India hav-
ing cellular coverage, increasing the geo-
graphical coverage is the next step for
Sharma and his team at Nokia.
The telephone had not even been
invented when Fredrik Idestam first started
his toilet paper and rubber boot business on
the banks of the river Nokia in Finland. He
could hardly have guessed that over a cen-
tury later the company he started would be
synonymous with a futuristic gadget.
UNLIKE MOST OTHER mobile phone mak-
ers, Nokia's advertising strategies are
often aimed at the low end consumer. For
instance, the Made For India advertise-
ment for the Nokia 1100 is targeted at
the entry-level phone user. It showed the
mobile tied to the fender of a truck that
traverses the length of India. The implicit
message is that phone still works at the
end of the long, hot, dusty, journey.
Nokia's advertisements have dwelt on the
human angle of mobile technology, rather
than emphasise their technical aspects.
Localised communications has helped
reinforce the core brand strength of
“human technology that appeals to con-
sumers,” admits Sanjeev Sharma, CEO,
Nokia. The Har Jeb Mein Rang (colour in
every pocket) advertisement was created
keeping in mind a market aspiring to go
for colour displays.
As a market leader, Nokia's advertising
has also had to play the role of educator.
During the days when phones in the grey
market sold much more than legal
phones, Nokia undertook a campaign to
educate people about the advantages of
going legit.
Through its astute advertising, Nokia has
sometimes been perceived as being the
innovator even when it is not. It is not the
first handset maker to have Hindi text dis-
play for SMS, but its hardsell campaign
showing the Hindi text on a display has
enabled it to usurp this position in the
minds of the general consumer.
AIMED AT THE MASS MARKET
THE MARKET LEADER AS EDUCATOR: Advertising the human angle of mobile technology
On the Web
Nokia India: www.nokia.co.in
strategy nokia story-new.qxp 30/1105 11:46 AM Page 61
doc_135564165.pdf