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How can Nokia and Microsoft score the homerun they need with the Nokia Lumia 900, the pairs first flagship smartphone, which AT&T will begin selling April 8? Convert over all current Symbian users, and lure away BlackBerry users from Research In Motions sinking ship, says Forrester analyst Sarah Rotman Epps in an April 5 blog post.
The market is ripe for disruptionPalm is dead, Symbian is sunsetting, RIM is faltering, and every player in the ecosystem (other than Google and Apple) want a third player to wedge between Google and Apple, wrote Rotman Epps. Windows Phone, led by Nokia, canand shouldbe the market disruptor, but doing so requires overcoming two challenges.
The first step is getting the carriers behind Nokia and Microsoft, she writes, telling an anecdote about a Verizon Wireless salesperson trying to talk her out of a Windows Phone. Later, she found a T-Mobile store where the ads were unavoidable.
He who pays the operator sells the phone, she concludes. Judging from how Nokia has approached promotion at T-Mobile, Nokias Windows Phones will sell much better than HTCs or Samsungs have.
Challenge number two: targeting the right audience, which she believes Nokia and Microsoft arent yet doing, in going after feature phone converts. Not only does this mean convincing consumers to take on the cost of a data plan in a still-soft economy, but also selling them on a platform thats less popular and all-around-them than iOS or Android.
Instead, said Rotman Epps, they should just steal RIMs fan base, who are already paying for data.
A more disruptiveand in my view, more achievablegoal is for Nokia and Microsoft to convert every BlackBerry user to Windows Phone within two years. BlackBerry users [have] consciously or unconsciously opted not to buy into Apple or Googles ecosystems thus far. And RIM itself acknowledges that it wont have its next-gen products ready anytime soon, argues Rotman Epps.
As of the 2011s fourth quarter, RIM had an 8.2 percent market share, according to IDC; add in the Symbian users, who, with Nokia gradually stopping support, will have to go somewhere, would position Nokia and Microsoft as a viable third platform and a foil for Google-Apple hegemony.
Gartner Research Vice President Carolina Milanesi similarly expressed to eWEEK that Windows Phones is coming to market at excellent time. Not only is RIM weak, but with Android vendors showing signs of fatigue and struggling to differentiate, Nokia and Microsoft could skim from Androids market share.
High-end users might not be willing to switch yet as the hype around Android remains, but mainstream consumers might, as their loyalty to Android is very low, said Milanesi. We continue to believe that Android attracts users as a default, because there is nothing else out there today other than iPhone.
Is Windows Phone a strong enough offering to take the number three spot?
I will say it loud and say it proud, she blogged. I love my Windows Phone.