What is out there for Nokia? Old school brick phones that nobody has? The problem is the brand isn't out there and 4 phones aren't going to cut it.
1. Nokia needs to release more handsets that take on different price points
You mean spam the market with billions of different handset models like Samsung does? I'm not really a fan of that idea. I feel like it's a waste of resources because you have to spend time and money developing and creating those products. Then after that, you have to spend time and money supporting those products. Not only that, having so many products confuses the consumer.
Like for the Galaxy Line, starting with the Galaxy S II there's the Galaxy Pro, Galaxy S Wii 4.0, Galaxy Player 5, Galaxy S Plus, Galaxy Prevail, Galaxy R, Galaxy Xcover, Galaxy W, Galaxy Y Pro, Galaxy M Pro, Galaxy Y, Galaxy S II LTE, Galaxy S II for T-Mobile, AT&T, Galaxy Note, Galaxy S WiFi 3.6, Galaxy Nexus for Sprint, Verizon, and GSM, Captivate Glide (Galaxy Glide), Galaxy S II Skyrocket, Galaxy Y DUOS, Galaxy Y Pro DUOS, Galaxy Ace Plus, Galaxy Attain 4G, Galaxy S II Skyrocket HD, Galaxy Note LTE, Galaxy S Blaze 4G, Galaxy S Advance, Galaxy S II CDMA, Galaxy mini 2, Galaxy Ace 2, Galaxy Ace DUOS, Galaxy Player 4.2, Galaxy Pocket, Galax Player 3.6, and now the Galaxy S III devices.
And what about their tablets? There's the original Galaxy Tab, two more version for AT&T and T-Mobile, and another version for CDMA. Then there's the Galaxy Tab 10.1v, Galaxy Tab 8.9, Galaxy Tab 10.1, Galaxy Tab Wi-Fi, Galaxy Tab 10.1 LTE, Galaxy Tab 10.1 Wi-Fi, Galaxy Tab 8.9 LTE, Galaxy Tab 7.7, Galaxy Tab 10.1 (T-Mobile), Galaxy Tab 7.0 Plus, Galaxy Tab 7.7 LTE, Galaxy Tab 2 (7.0), and Galaxy Tab 2 (10.1).
So my first question is, WTF? Secondly, Samsung, how do you not run out of names? And about the tablets, why do you have like 4 different screen sizes? I think it would have been easier just to choose two screen sizes (one big, one small) and stick with it.
This, by the way, is what I don't want Nokia to do. I think it's a waste of resources. In Samsung's case, it seems like Samsung is mixing and matching random parts out of their parts bin to make many different models to fill ever single niche; however, those phones don't seem to work great. Some of the phones in that list that you've never heard of before got poor reviews from phonearena.com (which is where I got the list of Samsung devices from).
I'm sorry if it seems like I'm hating on Samsung, but I really hate it when OEMs flood the market like that. Thankfully, HTC is now focusing on the One series, and hopefully Samsung doesn't try to make fifty different version of the Galaxy S III this time around.
To be honest, I'm not sure why manufacturers would knowingly put out subpar devices. I know you want to have lower end devices for consumers on a budget, but if you put out crap, do you think they'll want to buy a phone of your brand in the future?