Samsung has been on a real roller coaster
here in the United Kingdom in the last few
months. Its phones are selling well in lots of
countries, but the British seem to have a
particular affinity for its Galaxy line. Last week
the company chose London for the world
launch of its flagship model, the Galaxy S3 ,
staging one of the largest tech events I have
seen in this country. CNET did a great job of
covering it in a live blog, but what might not
have come across was the sheer scale of the
event.
Samsung hired Earls Court, a venue that's
more commonly used for big concerts and
massive exhibitions than product launches.
During the 2012 Olympic Games, it will host
volleyball. Samsung used the entire space to
launch a single product.
In front of a thronging, buzzing crowd, a
ridiculously large projection screen flashed
through the presentation as an orchestra
added pomp to the proceedings. At the end of
the presentation, the huge screen lifted to
reveal another vast hands-on area behind,
along with Samsung's new pop-up shops. I
stood at the back next to a local retailer who
was watching open-mouthed at the whole
thing unfolding.
The scale of the launch reflected a company
that's feeling confident about its position, and
to a large extent that confidence is justified.
According to some numbers at least, Samsung
is winning the smartphone war. Last week, IDC
released figures that showed Samsung
overtaking all other players in terms of
smartphone shipments.
What's really interesting to me though are the
numbers from Kantar Worldpanel, which show
just how strong Android is in the U.K.
compared to Apple's iOS. Kantar Worldpanel's
numbers put Android's share of smartphone
sales at 49 percent, compared to 29 percent for
iOS. Contrast that with the U.S., where Android
has 43 percent to Apple's 47 percent. There are
many reasons that Android phones are so
strong in the U.K., but one of the most
important is the strength of the Samsung
Galaxy portfolio.
As I argued for CNN last week , Samsung's
strategy seems to be winning over Apple's
here. However much money you have to
spend on a new phone, whatever sized screen
you need and no matter how gargantuan your
hands are, Samsung has a Galaxy phone that
will fit your needs. People like me often
complain that the range is confusing because
there are so many similar models, but
consumers don't appear to mind. In this
space, infinite choice seems to be winning, at
least for now.
It hasn't all been good for Samsung here
recently though. The rapid expansion in sales
has led to some real growing pains. Recently
the company generated a ton of vitriol from its
own customers in the U.K after messing up
the Ice Cream Sandwich software upgrade
process for its Galaxy S2. Re-hashing all of its
mistakes here would take up too much space
(you can get a sense of the frustration caused
from this piece ). Suffice to say there's only one
British non-swear word that can sum the
whole episode up: omnishambles.
Once upon a time, this sort of software mess-
up would have passed under the radar
unnoticed, but Samsung's popularity has
produced a legion of vocal customers that are
all too ready to complain when they are
messed around. But the company now knows
that people are watching, and is strongly
hinting that everything will be better next time
around.
Provided it can avoid creating too many
customer service problems for itself in the
future, my best guess is that the two-horse
smartphone race is set to continue, in Britain
at least, with the likes of HTC, Sony, Nokia, and
RIM left to pick up the crumbs.
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