What’s Wrong With Windows Phone?
By any measure of success Microsoft's Windows Phone is a flop -- so
far. The bitter irony for Microsoft is, it's a great phone. What's going
wrong?
Here are some interesting facts.
Microsoft's Windows Phone, introduced in 2010, is a critically
acclaimed mobile OS from the world’s largest software maker - a company
that has a long history with mobile products. As recently as late 2009,
Microsoft’s Windows Mobile platform claimed nearly 20 percent of U.S.
smartphone users. But today, instead of building on that success,
Microsoft has failed.
During the first three months of 2012, Microsoft's Windows Phone
platform owned a dismal 2 percent of the U.S. smartphone market,
according to
Nielsen ratings.
Even Microsoft's aging Windows Mobile platform had a bigger market
share than Windows Phone during that time, claiming 4.1 percent of
users, Nielsen reports.
Blame the Carriers?
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What’s wrong with Windows Phone? Analysts I spoke to say Microsoft's
struggles with its Windows Phone are tied to bad timing of its launch,
carrier partnerships, muddled marketing messages, and a deficit of apps
compared to the iOS and Android platform. The good news for Microsoft,
there are plenty of indicators suggesting Microsoft's Windows Phone
platform is ready to take off.
Charlie Kindel,
a former Microsoft employee who ran the Windows Phone developer
experience, believes a mobile OS lives and dies with the support (or the
lack thereof) of wireless carriers such as AT&T, Sprint, and
Verizon.
“The most important factor is whether carriers are pushing your
platform,” Kindel says. “Up until now carriers have not been selling
Windows Phones.”
Carriers claim to want a third smartphone platform to offset the
power of Apple and Google but often push the iPhone and Android devices
before other platforms, critics say. “Carrier support for Android grew
organically in response to the iPhone,” says Ross Rubin, a principal
analyst with market research firm NPD Group. When first introduced the
iPhone enjoyed an exclusive sales deal with AT&T. Other carriers
were quick to push Android as an alternative to the iPhone, and many
still do.
In 2009 and 2010 we saw Android share grow strongly first at Verizon,
then Sprint and T-Mobile, Rubin says. Microsoft would introduce Windows
Phone late 2010 missing the unprecedented first touchscreen-inspired
smartphone consumer push by nearly two years.
Today there is evidence that carriers are warming to Windows Phones.
Verizon CFO Fran Shammo recently hinted the company wants this year to
support Windows Phone in the same way it supported Android’s rise
several years ago. If Verizon follows that path it will put its
commercial muscle behind Windows Phone with widespread advertising,
in-store marketing, and retail sales people recommending
Microsoft-powered smartphones to customers -- just as it did with
Android.