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View Full Version : Nokia CEO Stephen Elop rallies troops in brutally honest 'burning platform' memo



Ben
9th February 2011, 10:24 AM
In a full and frank memo, Nokia CEO Stephen Elop confirms what we've all been saying for years. Fanbois aside, this is the real state of play at Nokia.

http://www.engadget.com/2011/02/08/nokia-ceo-stephen-elop-rallies-troops-in-brutally-honest-burnin/


Hello there,

There is a pertinent story about a man who was working on an oil platform in the North Sea. He woke up one night from a loud explosion, which suddenly set his entire oil platform on fire. In mere moments, he was surrounded by flames. Through the smoke and heat, he barely made his way out of the chaos to the platform's edge. When he looked down over the edge, all he could see were the dark, cold, foreboding Atlantic waters.

As the fire approached him, the man had mere seconds to react. He could stand on the platform, and inevitably be consumed by the burning flames. Or, he could plunge 30 meters in to the freezing waters. The man was standing upon a "burning platform," and he needed to make a choice.

He decided to jump. It was unexpected. In ordinary circumstances, the man would never consider plunging into icy waters. But these were not ordinary times - his platform was on fire. The man survived the fall and the waters. After he was rescued, he noted that a "burning platform" caused a radical change in his behaviour.

We too, are standing on a "burning platform," and we must decide how we are going to change our behaviour.

Over the past few months, I've shared with you what I've heard from our shareholders, operators, developers, suppliers and from you. Today, I'm going to share what I've learned and what I have come to believe.

I have learned that we are standing on a burning platform.

And, we have more than one explosion - we have multiple points of scorching heat that are fuelling a blazing fire around us.

For example, there is intense heat coming from our competitors, more rapidly than we ever expected. Apple disrupted the market by redefining the smartphone and attracting developers to a closed, but very powerful ecosystem.

In 2008, Apple's market share in the $300+ price range was 25 percent; by 2010 it escalated to 61 percent. They are enjoying a tremendous growth trajectory with a 78 percent earnings growth year over year in Q4 2010. Apple demonstrated that if designed well, consumers would buy a high-priced phone with a great experience and developers would build applications. They changed the game, and today, Apple owns the high-end range.

And then, there is Android. In about two years, Android created a platform that attracts application developers, service providers and hardware manufacturers. Android came in at the high-end, they are now winning the mid-range, and quickly they are going downstream to phones under €100. Google has become a gravitational force, drawing much of the industry's innovation to its core.

Let's not forget about the low-end price range. In 2008, MediaTek supplied complete reference designs for phone chipsets, which enabled manufacturers in the Shenzhen region of China to produce phones at an unbelievable pace. By some accounts, this ecosystem now produces more than one third of the phones sold globally - taking share from us in emerging markets.

While competitors poured flames on our market share, what happened at Nokia? We fell behind, we missed big trends, and we lost time. At that time, we thought we were making the right decisions; but, with the benefit of hindsight, we now find ourselves years behind.

The first iPhone shipped in 2007, and we still don't have a product that is close to their experience. Android came on the scene just over 2 years ago, and this week they took our leadership position in smartphone volumes. Unbelievable.

We have some brilliant sources of innovation inside Nokia, but we are not bringing it to market fast enough. We thought MeeGo would be a platform for winning high-end smartphones. However, at this rate, by the end of 2011, we might have only one MeeGo product in the market.

At the midrange, we have Symbian. It has proven to be non-competitive in leading markets like North America. Additionally, Symbian is proving to be an increasingly difficult environment in which to develop to meet the continuously expanding consumer requirements, leading to slowness in product development and also creating a disadvantage when we seek to take advantage of new hardware platforms. As a result, if we continue like before, we will get further and further behind, while our competitors advance further and further ahead.

At the lower-end price range, Chinese OEMs are cranking out a device much faster than, as one Nokia employee said only partially in jest, "the time that it takes us to polish a PowerPoint presentation." They are fast, they are cheap, and they are challenging us.

And the truly perplexing aspect is that we're not even fighting with the right weapons. We are still too often trying to approach each price range on a device-to-device basis.

The battle of devices has now become a war of ecosystems, where ecosystems include not only the hardware and software of the device, but developers, applications, ecommerce, advertising, search, social applications, location-based services, unified communications and many other things. Our competitors aren't taking our market share with devices; they are taking our market share with an entire ecosystem. This means we're going to have to decide how we either build, catalyse or join an ecosystem.

This is one of the decisions we need to make. In the meantime, we've lost market share, we've lost mind share and we've lost time.

On Tuesday, Standard & Poor's informed that they will put our A long term and A-1 short term ratings on negative credit watch. This is a similar rating action to the one that Moody's took last week. Basically it means that during the next few weeks they will make an analysis of Nokia, and decide on a possible credit rating downgrade. Why are these credit agencies contemplating these changes? Because they are concerned about our competitiveness.

Consumer preference for Nokia declined worldwide. In the UK, our brand preference has slipped to 20 percent, which is 8 percent lower than last year. That means only 1 out of 5 people in the UK prefer Nokia to other brands. It's also down in the other markets, which are traditionally our strongholds: Russia, Germany, Indonesia, UAE, and on and on and on.

How did we get to this point? Why did we fall behind when the world around us evolved?

This is what I have been trying to understand. I believe at least some of it has been due to our attitude inside Nokia. We poured gasoline on our own burning platform. I believe we have lacked accountability and leadership to align and direct the company through these disruptive times. We had a series of misses. We haven't been delivering innovation fast enough. We're not collaborating internally.

Nokia, our platform is burning.

We are working on a path forward -- a path to rebuild our market leadership. When we share the new strategy on February 11, it will be a huge effort to transform our company. But, I believe that together, we can face the challenges ahead of us. Together, we can choose to define our future.

The burning platform, upon which the man found himself, caused the man to shift his behaviour, and take a bold and brave step into an uncertain future. He was able to tell his story. Now, we have a great opportunity to do the same.

Stephen.

Ben
9th February 2011, 11:13 AM
This is quite staggering. Apparently I'm not as out of touch with Nokia's situation as I feared I might be; indeed, Stephen Elop appears to 'get' Nokia's predicament perfectly!

But recognising failings is just the first step. An important one, which if neglected can be disastrous, but a relatively easy one. There's no new information to me here other than the extent of Apple's success at the high end - a staggering 61% of $300+ handsets are iPhones! One images that, just a few years ago, Nokia would have fit far better into that sentence.

No, the hard part comes now, where Elop and the board must decide what to do. Windows Phone 7 makes some sense to me, providing Nokia can build an ecosystem around that. Nokia have always been Microsoft people IMHO, so I think it'll work well. But it does steal a significant differentiating factor from Nokia, and perhaps it'll cost them dear in the long term. That's not to say that they couldn't develop Meego internally and push it hard once they've got it spot on, though, does it? Apple had OS X running on Intel for years; they pushed the changes out once the time was right and still sold plenty of Power PC Macs in the meantime. Not the same, I know, but similar.

The internal issues within Nokia will be much more difficult to fix. A radical overhaul risks alienating the talent within Nokia, but at the same time the dead wood has to go. I don't envy Mr. Elop one iota.

Hands0n
9th February 2011, 08:13 PM
This is just what Nokia needs. A refreshing breath of brutally frank honesty within and without. Facing a big dose of reality as its competitors close in.

Interesting reading all over the place - Nokia are losing the Indian market, slated to be the third largest economy in the world and pushing Japan to fourth position. Here is a market that is big on dual-SIM handsets and that Nokia has ignored until only recently. Meanwhile, other manufacturers stepped into the breech displacing Nokia from that fertile ground.

Nokia have their brand name and long-term reputation to trade with, for now. But that will not carry them through the next decade. They really have got to get back on track in the high-end smartphone business that eludes them right now. They have several options open to them ... WP7 is strongly muted, then Android is a possibility. Of course, they could do something completely radical and have a word with HP about WebOS!

Ben
9th February 2011, 08:25 PM
Yes, India was a blooper and a half - quite something that Nokia neglected the dual-SIM segment allowing home-grown manufacturers and unknowns to thrive.

I can understand why this is so painful for Nokia; they practically invented the modern smartphone, yet despite reviewers hammering them about it for years they completely failed to pay attention to the user interface. Now hardware is becoming very generic, just like it did with PCs, and they have no software edge and no hardware edge. Just a brand. They're paying the price for years of complacency and a misguided belief that Symbian smartphones were a) what the world wanted and b) the best that they could be.

Everyone plays the incremental game, especially Apple, and there's always the risk of being leapfrogged when constraining product development to maximise profit. But Nokia's minuscule advances left them not just leapfrogged but lapped!

Lord, I hope they don't go WebOS. I mean sure, it's a possibility, but I wouldn't say it's the ecosystem Nokia needs right now! Windows Phone 7, on the other hand, may be tiny, but it has the Windows ecosystem to back it up, and adoption is currently so small that Nokia may have enough sway to make customisations. Like I said, though, I think they need Meego long-term.

I'd buy a WP7 FrankeNokia in a heartbeat, if only to put with the 6680 and all the others. It'd bear a little sticky that said "2011: When the sh*t really hit the fan".

miffed
9th February 2011, 09:53 PM
LOL , thank Goodness Nokia's CEO isn't listening to their Fanbois , who insist "Everything's Fine , Don't panic !" :D

Can only be a good thing. Time to retire Symbian and move on to something relevant - Quite exciting really !

Hands0n
10th February 2011, 06:37 PM
The good thing, for Nokia, is that Elop is not one of those to be re-arranging the deck chairs on the Titanic. He's seen the rot and he wants it sorted. The challenge is for the right decisions to be made - and none of those involve Sybian, Meego or QT.