A
Wall Street Journal interview with Huawei's top honcho, Consumer
Business Group CEO Richard Yu, reveals the thinking and key strategic
choices of a company that, along with several others, has been on the
rise lately.
"We feel Tizen has no chance to be successful. Even for Windows Phone it's difficult to be successful."
What's even more, Yu isn't feeling much better better about Windows Phone, either, specifically because the company has been losing money on its WP-based smartphones for some two years now. For that very reason, the exect says all Windows Phone devices are currently put on hold.
The
CEO also told the WSJ that it has no plans to build its own OS, even
though "it's easy to design" one. The problem, as most of you will have
realized already, is building the ecosystem around it -- a feat that
even Microsoft is struggling with. The Huawei exec also said that his
company is not planning on making a Lenovo-like acquisition (Motorola
Mobility), and will instead focus on R&D. According to Yu, a bigger
sales volume (that can be achieved through acquisitions, for example)
can help with lowering costs, but it's R&D that will ultimately
provide consumers with better value.
Huawei is
now the third-largest smartphone vendor based on total device shipments
and shipped 52 million handsets last year. According to Huawei, the
company is also seeing higher profit margins than before, and is hoping
to ship a whopping 80 million devices in 2014.
source: Wall Street Journal (subscription)
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