Case study: The Rise and Fall of Nokia By by Juan Alcacer, Tarun Khanna and Christine Snively.
Nokia provides telecommunications network equipment and services.
It was world’s leading manufacturer of mobile telephone handsets.
BUT Had to sale it’s assets to the Microsoft for $7.2 billion.
The sale marked as “sad ending to Nokia”.
product specification process and concept generation process
The Rise and Fall of Nokia By by Juan Alcacer, Tarun Khanna and Christine Snively
1. Case study: The Rise and Fall of Nokia
By by Juan Alcacer, Tarun Khanna and Christine Snively
TEAM MEMBERS
Mahgul Khan ______18S-MBA-BS25
Varda Shaikh ______18S-MBA-BS19
Hiba Shaikh________18S-MBA-BS28
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2. Introduction of Nokia
• Nokia provides telecommunications
network equipment and services.
• It was world’s leading manufacturer of
mobile telephone handsets.
BUT
• Had to sale it’s assets to the Microsoft for
$7.2 billion.
• The sale marked as “sad ending to Nokia”.
3. • founder of Nokia.
• Nokia started as timber company.
• He established wood-pulp mill in
town of nokia, Finland.
• Due to European industrialization
and growing consumption of
paper and cardboard Nokia soon
became successful.
Fredrik Idestam
(1865)
• Merged to “Nokia corporation”.
• 5 core businesses i.e
• Rubber.
• Cable.
• Forestry.
• Electronics.
• Power generation.
Bjorn Westerlund
(1960’s)
Nokia’s Early History: 1865-1970’s
5. Slide Title
•Era of acquisition.
•Largest consumer electronics
company.
•First mobile phone “mobira
cityman”.
•Buying binge, left company cash
poor.
Kari Kairamo
(1977-1988)
•Era of challenges.
•Streamlined management and
restructured the firm in 6
divisions.
•Fall of soviet union affected
profitability.
•Banks hesitant to lend, left nokia
dependent on its own cash flow.
Simo Vuorilehto
(1988-1992)
•Implemented “ The Nokia Way”,
highlighting core values.
•Back to basic approach, can’t
afford mistakes. Do small things
correctly.
•Firm reduced to 4 divisions.
Jorma Ollila
( 1992-2006)
•Regain market position.
•Increased value of company from
approx 1 billion to more than 10
billion.
Rajeev Suri
(2014-present)
Nokia Under Different CEO’s
6. NOKIA phones
Nokia is a pioneer and also a world leader
in mobile telecommunications
Nokia 1011
Nokia first digital hand handled phone for GSM (Global System For
Mobile Communications ) handsets sales were growing, in 1992
NOKIA had become the biggest producer of mobile phones in
Europe, and second largest producer in the worldwide.
Characteristics
• NOKIA 1011 had an extendable antenna phones
• have memory that could hold only 99 phone numbers.
• Data inputs in numeric form though it has numeric key
pad and also send and receive SMS.
• TOW line display screen
7. Evolving Consumer Market
NOKIA expanded considerably in all areas to support customer
needs and the growth of the telecommunications industry.
NOKIA 2100 Series
In the same year 1992, NOKIA extended series 2100 was the first
smallest and lightest phones in 1992 it is designed as a user friendly
that includes
Features
• 5 line LCD display
• Soft touch keypad
• Selectable ringtones that could be personalized
• Phones become pocket sized
8. NOKIA 8100 series
In 1996 NOKIA 8100 introduced this model
in MATRIX movie in Hollywood
Features
• Sliding cover.
• Colored and exchangeable mobile
covers.
• Downloading of ringtones.
9. • Nokia was the first to segment there product line.
• First to build a brand identify.
• First to understand that design was essential in this business.
• First to take advantage in global manufacturing in a business.
• Was the first mobile phone to offer web browsing.
Nokia At Its Peak
Invested in research and development
also
hired young art school designers to keep up with trends
10. NOKIA’S EMERGING MARKET STRATEGY
• In the early 2000s, turned attention to emerging market.
• Estimated 600 million potential subscribers in china, India and
Russia.
• In 2002, Nokia reorganized itself into 4 division:
1. Mobile phones
2. Multimedia phones
3. Enterprise solution
4. Networks.
11. • in 2004, Sales slowed developed markets.
• Market shares fell from 35% to 28.9%.
REASON:
Failure to respond to new “ clamshells” or flip-phones.
STRATEGY:
Cutting price on selected handsets and eliminating
some models.
12. INCREASED COMPETITION
• By the mid-2000s, the industry was increasingly
competitive.
• New competitors from Asia entered European markets.
• Increased competition shortened the product life cycle,
increased pressure on design, manufacturing and
distribution.
• Nokia maintained a significant advantage in economic of
scale.
13. Industry shift to software
• Increased demand for new features and apps
• Operating system became an important factor in a
manufacturer’s strategy.
• By the end of 2007, Nokia’s symbian operating system
remained the most widely used in the world.
• The success of Apple’s iPhone solidified the industry’s
transition from handset-focused to software-focused.
14. THE U.S. MARKET
• In 2007, apple introduced the iphone, which ran on
Apple’s proprietary operating system(iOS), first
released in the U.S and available worldwide in 2008.
• By 2007, Nokia remained the leader in the fastest-
growing markets including China, India and southeast
Asia.
16. In september 2010, Stephen Elop was appointed as
CEO of nokia. As he was also the former president
of Microsoft’s business division.
He got to know about the nokia’s failure, reasons
were:
• To release a product that compete with the iphone.
• Nokia’s profit margin had declined and market
share dropped down 40.3% in global market.
• Apple dominated the high end smart phone market.
• Symbian applications were not so advanced like
IOS and androids apps.
17. Elop recognized the challenges and wrote a memo to their
employees.
Memo stated:
“I have learned that we are standing on a burning platform and
we have multiple points of scorching heat that are fueling a
blazing fire around us and that needs to be changed”
18. In September 2011, to come out from the burning
platform the company took some bold steps:
• Nokia and Microsoft announced plans to form a
broad strategic partnership that would use their
complementary strengths and expertise to
create a new global mobile system.
• In September 2013, nokia sold it’s devices and
services business to microsoft and provided
access to nokia’s patent for ten years in $7.2
billion.
Eventually after the announcement of
partnership, nokia’s share price increased 40%.