Nokia CEO Stephen Elop recently expressed hope, on a Finnish television programme, that the first Nokia smartphones running Microsoft’s Windows Phone platform could arrive in 2011.
Not wishing to disappoint, the company has promised nothing until 2012. However, Jo Harlow, Nokia’s executive vice president of smart devices, has indicated that Elop may get his wish.
“We should be launching new devices in a rhythm that might be every couple of months, every three months, something like that,” she said. “We’re going to keep coming with new devices in order to have something to talk about.”
Harlow additionally told Forbes, “Our target is absolutely still this year… and the target looks good.”
Elop announced on February 11 that Nokia was making a major shift, effective immediately, and that Windows, not Symbian, would be the company’s primary focus. Both Nokia and Microsoft have had trouble winning consumers away from the Apple iPhone and Android-running smartphones.
“We have significant competition, we have to fight hard, we have to show intellectual curiosity – make sure we understand the competition – and of course everyone’s got to be accountable, at the same time, for the results,” Elop said. Because of the competition, he added, “we have to go faster and harder and more aggressively now than we’ve ever gone before”.
“There will always be those global applications that everybody likes to use all over the world, but we have focused for many years on providing locally relevant material, whether it’s educational materials, whether it’s things that help people in their business – things unique to that culture – those are the things that I think really make a difference,” he said.
With China’s growing smartphone market, Nokia could hardly ask for a larger local base. Morgan Stanley has reported that by 2012 China will account for 41 percent of tablet shipments – while the United States will be responsible for just 11 percent of the market.
Toward the goal of launching successful applications, Elop said Nokia is also working “to create a great environment for the developers of applications”. Part of this is the decision to collect together all the applications for Windows Phone, Series 40 and Symbian to offer maximum exposure.
Despite Symbian’s second-fiddle role, Elop said investment in the OS “absolutely continues“. Indeed, on May 25 the company launched a new Symbian phone, albeit for a very specialised market.
While Nokia announced that it plans to sell about 150 million Symbian devices “in the years to come”, the Oro is not likely to make much of a dent.
Alessandro Lamanna, Nokia’s vice president of marketing, said in a video on the blog that it will be available in “very low volume, on purpose, and available only in some shops, in some regions”. When it comes to a premium product, he added, “it’s not a matter about shouting but a matter about whispering”.
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