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After focusing relentlessly on the enterprise customer, Research in Motion is going all guns blazing for the individual consumer |
Priyanka Joshi / Mumbai July 4, 2011, 0:47 IST |
After focusing relentlessly on the enterprise customer, Research in Motion is going all guns blazing for the individual consumer
The media invite for the launch of Research in Motion’s (RIM’s) tablet PC, PlayBook, was in the form of a boxing glove. The message — and we don’t pick up signals wrong — was loud and clear: RIM is ready to knock out competition. That’s the overriding mood at RIM, better known as the maker of BlackBerry smartphones.
Frenny Bawa, managing director (India), RIM, knows that there are few phones yet that can improvise on BlackBerry’s corporate email feature and security functions. But she’s not blind to the growing threat of Google Inc’s Android operating system, Apple hardware and affordable handsets from homegrown players in the Indian market. “There is fierce competition in the industry and we recognise that,” Bawa notes. “So, instead of cutting prices and joining the race we chose to focus better on our services, customer data plans, service centres, retail presence and developing the apps’ ecosystem.”
The telecommunications and wireless device company’s BlackBerry has a share of 16.5 per cent in the world smartphone market. But globally it has been hamstrung by delays in product launches and has warned that its profit for the full fiscal year would be well below Wall Street expectations. In fact, RIM got poor reviews on the April launch of the company’s tablet PlayBook and about 1,000 units had to be recalled because of defective software. RIM Co-CEO Jim Balsillie admitted to analysts: “The PlayBook launch did not go as smoothly as we had planned.” After cutting profit forecasts for the year, the company reported a nearly 10 per cent drop in its fiscal first-quarter (ended on May 28) net income.
PECKING ORDER The top 10 mobile phone players in India (2010-11) | ||||
Companies | Revenue 2009-10 | Revenue 2010-11 | Growth (%) | Market share (%) |
Nokia | 12,900 | 12,929 | 0.2 | 39.0 |
Samsung | 4,700 | 5,720 | 21.7 | 17.2 |
Micromax | 1,602 | 2,289 | 42.9 | 6.9 |
BlackBerry | 1,210 | 1,950 | 61.2 | 5.9 |
LG | 1,600 | 1,834 | 14.6 | 5.5 |
G’Five | 755 | 1,326 | 75.6 | 4.0 |
Karbonn | 800 | 1,004 | 25.5 | 3.0 |
Spice | 1,040 | 920 | -11.5 | 2.8 |
Maxx | 514 | 745 | 44.9 | 2.2 |
Sony Ericsson | 590 | 690 | 16.9 | 2.1 |
Source: Voice&Data June 2011 |
So, it is not hard to see why emerging markets like India are critical for the Waterloo, Ontario, company. As a matter of fact, RIM’s sales in the Asia-Pacific region have nearly doubled in the last year, growing to 1.61 million units in the first three months of 2011, from 817,000 units during the same period last year.
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But the fight to get a bigger share of India’s fast-growing mobile market is getting fierce by the day. With smartphone platforms like Google’s Android and Apple’s iOS upending the market, players like Nokia and RIM are forced to entirely rethink how they interact with their customers. Last year, RIM decided to switch horses and acquired QNX Software Systems and started the arduous process of moving its smartphones to a new operating system (OS); on its part, Nokia is abandoning Symbian even as it waits for the Windows Phones.
RIM is hoping that QNX-based “superphones” and a tablet, also running on open-platform QNX OS, would help it not only retain its share in the enterprise segment, but will garner a bigger share of the consumer market. Look at the direction in which the market is headed. CyberMedia Research (CMR) expects the India telecom services and mobile handsets market to grow at 16.7 per cent in 2012 (over 2011) to touch revenues of Rs 288,832 crore. CMR analysts peg that the growth in the India domestic mobile handsets market will be fuelled by a more than 150 per cent increment in the value of feature-phones and smartphones shipped, from Rs 50,714 crore in 2010 to Rs 1,28,729 crore in 2014.
Voice&Data 100, an annual survey of the Indian equipment industries and telecom services, has reported that BlackBerry is among the top five mobile phone brands in India with revenues of Rs 1,950 in 2010-11, up 61.2 per cent from 2009-10. The survey claims that its entry level smartphone saw more sales in the fourth quarter than the other three quarters put together and helped the company take its market share to 5.9 per cent. Nokia, Samsung and Micromax — with their extensive range of affordable feature phones and entry level devices — were all ranked higher than RIM, according to the Voice&Data survey.
BLACKBERRY’S BATTLEGROUND |
What RIM is up against in India? # The smartphones market in India is expected grow to over 10 million units in 2011 from 6 million units in 2010. Close to 80 per cent of the domestic smartphones market is still untapped. # The rivals: Apple with its high-end smartphone and app store, Samsung’s focused step towards affordable Android devices and homegrown players who are building in free messaging and social networking tools in devices to compete with BBM. |
RIM’s strengths # RIM sits on $2.3 billion of cash and short-term investments, $900 million in long-term investments and no debt. # Stellar upcoming products like the 9900 series, which is touted to be the thinnest BlackBerry ever and features the new BB 7.0 operating system, a 1.2-GHZ processor, a touch screen, full QWERTY keyboard, liquid display, 5 megapixel camera and NFC (near field communications). # A loyal enterprise base that loves the security its email encryption lends and the CIO-friendly services to manage devices. # A majority of BlackBerry users (66 per cent) felt their handsets provided ‘excellent’ or ‘very good’ value for money, as per a CMR survey. |
RIM’s weaknesses # No strong smartphone model to compete with refreshed line-up of Apple and Android devices. # Inadequate connectivity features in its newest tablet PC and new QNX handsets are expected to come in only in early 2012. |
Source: CMR, Deloitte reports |
RIM goes all-out
There’s a bigger worry for RIM, more so in India. Analysts at equity research firm William Blair note, “Although RIM does maintain a strong position among enterprise users, we believe new consumer smartphone buyers have dried up, as consumers strongly prefer Android and iOS and sales representatives position RIM as a business-centric platform.” Having seen its base expand quickly among the youth in the last two years, especially for its services like BlackBerry Messenger (BBM), the Canadian company will go the distance to correct that perception.
To be fair, RIM has spent the last two years wooing the individual customers in India. Beginning with pre-paid BlackBerry data plans to give Indian users the flexibility they sought, RIM has negotiated affordable data plans (starting as low as Rs 150) from mobile operators. Affordable smartphones, at prices below Rs 10,000, got RIM a big chunk of the youth market that saw sense in investing in the free BBM service. “Social networking has been a leg up for individual users and we realised that as we saw a sharp uptake in BBM subscribers,” Bawa states. “So we sat down with operators and talked through what kind of flexi plans we could offer the younger customer base.”
Apple, which wowed customers with bleeding-edge apps on the iPhone, has shown what innovative content can do to smartphone sales. RIM was quick on the uptake — the company has roped in 17,000 developers who are working on apps for BlackBerry’s global audience. Then it has quite a distance to cover — Apple with over 400,000 apps or Android with over 200,000 apps would still be a bigger draw for the astute smartphone or tablet PC consumer.
Nobody at RIM would admit this but the company, which had till date focused just on smartphones, is in a hurry to build categories like tablet PCs, a consumer fan base and apps — exactly where its competition had moved in a couple of years ago.
But if tablet PC is a new business vertical for RIM, it has no intention to be just a follower. “PlayBook is a tablet PC that runs BlackBerry OS and does everything that competition cannot. It runs Adobe AIR, Flash and has BBM built in for current BlackBerry users,” Bawa says drawing attention to what the company is touting as the PlayBook’s unique selling proposition.
Priced at Rs 32,900, the PlayBook has to fight for shelf space primarily with the Samsung Galaxy Tab and Apple iPad in India, where both of them have had a good head start. Vishal Tripathi, principal research analyst, Gartner points, “While many different OS-based tablets have been launched in India, none of them have been able to penetrate the enterprise market. Though RIM has substantial following in smartphones, its tablet still needs to prove its worth to RIM followers.” While enterprise customers are warming up to the idea of a tablet, Tripathi adds, adoption is not happening fast enough. The point to remember is that the enterprise segment prefers 10-inch tablets — in contrast to the 7-inch PlayBook — for their ability to support two-hand typing and larger viewing areas for apps.
Then some missing features. Experts point out that the Personal Information Management (PIM) function is not accessible unless you pair the device with a BlackBerry handset — so if you don’t have one, buy one. And even in this case you have to use your handset’s cellular data connection to work with your email and contact lists. PIM is undeniably one of the most important features of a tablet device, making the PlayBook, in its current state, somewhat unappealing to users not on the BlackBerry owners list.
Watching competition
Apple with a market capitalisation of $307.19 billion has become the biggest technology company in the world, followed by Nokia with a market cap of $30.89 billion; RIM occupies the third slot with a market cap of $22.5 billion. That perhaps is no deterrent for the company, which has invested heavily in tablet PCs, the QNX operating system, and software services that it can provide its enterprise and individual consumers. In fact, services are proving to be BlackBerry’s backbone in both the enterprise and consumer segments. Mind you, while the software business makes up only 1 per cent of RIM’s total revenue, it has much higher margins than the hardware business.
In India, CyberMedia research suggests that the Android OS will continue to gain acceptance as the preferred mobile operating system and 12 per cent of all smartphones shipped in India during 2011 are expected to be based on the Android platform. Original equipment manufacturers such as HTC and Samsung have moved in rapidly with Android handsets in the mid- and premium-segments of the market. As Android gains share, consumers are exposed to open cross-ecosystem messaging platforms such as WhatsApp.
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