Type | Joint venture |
---|---|
Industry | Telecommunications |
Founded | October 1, 2001[1] |
Headquarters | Hammersmith, London, United Kingdom |
Area served | Worldwide |
Key people | Carl-Henric Svanberg (Chairman) Bert Nordberg (President) Anders Runevad (EVP) |
Products | Mobile phones Mobile music devices Wireless systems Wireless voice devices Hi-Tech accessories Wireless data devices |
Revenue | €6.788 billion (2009)[2] |
Profit | -€836 million (2009) |
Employees | 8,450 (as of April 2010)[3] |
Parent | Sony Corporation (50%) Ericsson AB (50%) |
Website | SonyEricsson.com |
Sony Ericsson is a joint venture established on October 1, 2001[1] by the Japanese consumer electronics company Sony Corporation and the Swedish telecommunications company Ericsson to make mobile phones. The stated reason for this venture is to combine Sony's consumer electronics expertise with Ericsson's technological leadership in the communications sector. Both companies have stopped making their own mobile phones.
The company's global management is based in Hammersmith in London, United Kingdom, and it has research & development teams in Sweden, Japan, China, Germany, the United States, India and the United Kingdom. By 2009, it was the fourth-largest mobile phone manufacturer in the world after Nokia, Samsung and LG.[4] The sales of products largely increased due to the launch of the adaptation of Sony's popular Walkman and Cyber-shot series.
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While Sony Ericsson has been enjoying strong growth recently, its South Korean rival LG Electronics overtook it in Q1 2008 due to the company's profits falling significantly by 43% to €133 million (approx. US$ 179.6697 million [5]), sales falling by 8% and market share dropping from 9.4% to 7.9%, despite favourable conditions that the handset market was expected to grow by 10% in 2008. Sony Ericsson announced another profit warning in June 2008[6] and saw net profit crash by 97% in Q2 2008, announcing that it would cut 2,000 jobs, leading to wide fear that Sony Ericsson is on the verge of decline along with its struggling rival, Motorola.[7] In Q3 the profits were much on the same level, however November and December saw increased profits along with new models being released such as the C905 being one of the top sellers across the United Kingdom.
Sony Ericsson has, as of July 18, 2008, approximately 9,400 employees and 2,500 contractors worldwide. Bert Nordberg is the president of the company . The Corporate Executive Vice President is Anders Runevad.
In the United States, Ericsson partnered with General Electric in the early nineties, primarily to establish a US presence and brand recognition.
Ericsson had decided to obtain chips for its phones from a single source—a Philips facility in New Mexico. In March 2000, a fire at the Philips factory contaminated the sterile facility. Philips assured Ericsson and Nokia (their other major customer) that production would be delayed for no more than a week. When it became clear that production would actually be compromised for months, Ericsson was faced with a serious shortage. Nokia had already begun to obtain parts from alternative sources, but Ericsson's position was much worse as production of current models and the launch of new ones was held up.[8]
Ericsson, which had been in the cellular phone market for decades, and was the world's no. 3 cellular telephone handset maker, was struggling with huge losses. This was mainly due to this fire and its inability to produce cheaper phones like Nokia. To curtail the losses, it considered outsourcing production to Asian companies that could produce the handsets for lower costs.
Speculation began about a possible sale by Ericsson of its mobile phone division, but the company's president said they had no plans to do so. "Mobile phones are really a core business for Ericsson. We wouldn't be as successful (in networks) if we didn't have phones", he said.
Sony was a marginal player in the worldwide cell phone market with a share of less than 1 percent in 2000. 2001,
By August 2001, the two companies had finalized the terms of the merger announced in April. The company was to have an initial workforce of 3,500 employees.
Ericsson's market share actually fell and in August 2002, Ericsson said it would stop making mobile phones and end its partnership with Sony if the business continued to disappoint However, in January 2003, both companies said they would inject more money into the joint venture in a bid to stem the losses.
Sony Ericsson's strategy was to release new models capable of digital photography as well as other multimedia capabilities such as downloading and viewing video clips and personal information management capabilities. To this end, it released several new models which had built-in digital camera and color screen which were novelties at that time. The joint venture, however, continued to make bigger losses in spite of booming sales. The target date for making a profit from its first year to 2002 was postponed to 2003 to second half of 2003. It failed in its mission of becoming the top seller of multimedia handsets and was in fifth-place and struggling in 2003.
In June 2002, Sony Ericsson said it would stop making CDMA cellphones for the US market and would focus on GSM, as the dominant technology. It also slashed jobs in research and development in the USA and in Germany. In October 2003, it posted its first quarterly profit but warned that falling prices on phones and competition would make it difficult to stay in black. Sony Ericsson's recovery is credited to the success of the T610 model. Although Sony Ericsson doesn't make CDMA cellphones for global market until right now, however they keep make CDMA cellphones for Japanese market, mainly for au by KDDI.
Following the success of its P800 phone, Sony Ericsson introduced the P900 at simultaneous events in Las Vegas and Beijing in October 2003. It was pegged as smaller, faster, simpler and more flexible than its predecessor.
In March 2004, Ericsson said it would try to block its rival Nokia from gaining control of Symbian, an industry consortium that made operating software for smart phones.
In 2004, Sony Ericsson's market share increased from 5.6 percent in the first quarter to 7 percent in the second quarter . In July 2004, Sony Ericsson unveiled the P910 communicator with its integrated thumbboard, broad e-mail support, quadruple memory and improved screen.
In February 2005, Sony Ericsson president Miles Flint announced at the 3GSM World Congress that Sony Ericsson would unveil a mobile phone/digital music player in the next month. It would be called the Walkman phone and would play music file formats such as MP3 and AAC.
On March 1, 2005, Sony Ericsson introduced the K750i with a 2 megapixel camera, as well as its platform mate, the W800i, the first of the Walkman phones capable of 30 hours of music playback, and two low-end phones.
In 2007 their first 5-Megapixel camera phone, the Sony Ericsson K850i, was announced followed in 2008 by the Sony Ericsson C905, the world's first 8-Megapixel phone. At Mobile World Congress 2009, Sony Ericsson unveiled the first 12-Megapixel phone, named Satio, on 28 May 2009.
On May 1, 2005, Sony Ericsson agreed to become the global title sponsor for the WTA Tour in a deal worth 88 million US dollars over 6 years. The women's pro tennis circuit was renamed the Sony Ericsson WTA Tour. Just over a month later on June 7, it announced sponsorship of West Indian batsmen Chris Gayle and Ramnaresh Sarwan.
In October 2005, Sony Ericsson presented the first mobile phone based on UIQ 3, the P990.
On January 2, 2007, Sony Ericsson announced in Stockholm that it will be having some of its mobile phones produced in India. It announced that its two outsourcing partners, FLextronics and Foxconn will be producing 10 million cellphones per year by 2009. CEO Miles Flint announced at a press conference held with India's communications minister Dayanidhi Maran in Chennai that India was one of the fastest growing markets in the world and a priority market for Sony Ericsson with 105 million users of GSM mobile telephones.
On February 2, 2007, Sony Ericsson acquired UIQ Technology, a Swedish software company from Symbian Ltd.. UIQ will remain an independent company, Miles Flint announced.[9]
On October 15, 2007, Sony Ericsson announced on Symbian Smartphone Show that they will be selling half of its UIQ share to Motorola thus making UIQ technology owned by two large mobile phone companies.
Sony Ericsson currently concentrates on the categories of: music, camera, business (web and email), design, all-rounder, eco-friendly, and budget focused phones. Its six largest categories are:
Series | Branding | Description | Origin |
---|---|---|---|
C | Cyber-shot | Camera-focused phones. | Cyber-shot |
D | T-Mobile | T-Mobile network exclusive phones. | Deutsche Telekom |
F | Vodafone (partial) | Vodafone network exclusive phones; Gaming focused phones | Vodafone / Fun |
G | Web | Web browsing-oriented phones. | Generation Web |
J | Junior/Low end | Low-end series | Junior |
K | Cyber-shot (partial) and QuickShare (partial) | All-around phones | Kamera, Swedish for camera |
M | QWERTY, fashion-focused business phones | Business-focused smartphones. | Messaging |
P | PDA UIQ (Symbian) phones | Powerhouse smartphones. | PDA |
R | Radio | Low end phones that are made for AM/FM radio | Radio |
S | Style/Sagem | Fashion low end phones, mostly part produced by Sagem | Swivel, Slider, Snapshot, Sagem |
T | Talker/Older Ericsson | All-around phones/Older Ericsson handsets | Tala (Swedish for "talk") |
TM | T-Mobile | T-Mobile USA network exclusive phones | T-Mobile |
U | Entertainment Unlimited | Internal model number for phones launched under the “Entertainment Unlimited” brand | Unlimited |
V | Vodafone | Vodafone network exclusive phones. | Vodafone |
W | Walkman | Music-focused phones. | Walkman |
X | Xperia | Convergence and powerhouse devices. | Xperia |
Z | Ze Bobber (meaning With Flip) | Design-oriented phones/clamshells | Ze Bobber |
After the 2008 Mobile World Congress, Sony Ericsson announced their new naming system comprising four characters, each character denoting the "Series", the "Range/Class", the "Version" and the "Form Factor" respectively.
Series | Range/Class | Version | Form Factor |
(see above for series letters) | 1-4: Low-end 5-7: Mid-range 8-9: High-end |
(in numerical order of succession) | 0-2: Candybar 3-5: Slider 6-8: Clamshell 9: Others |
Some older Sony Ericsson handsets and some older that are still on the market (i.e. Sony Ericsson W890i) use suffixes for the market it is sold in, or stripped down features. The suffixes used were:
All new devices created by Sony Ericsson will not use suffixes but just the model (i.e. instead of A000a there will be A000 in every market, to avoid confusion, they will also have names replaced instead of a model to avoid even more confusion (i.e. instead of Sony Ericsson U10i they named it Sony Ericsson Aino)
Sony Ericsson has used three methods in the past of naming their mobile products:
Another peculiar naming format was the one used in naming the Z1010; this format has not been used since the Z1010.
Furthermore, Sony Ericsson always give their phones codenames when developing. Mainly to keep the information secret and to prevent leaks. All codenames are female names, and some have been taken from the female players of the Sony Ericsson-sponsored tennis tournament, WTA.
Sony Ericsson posted its first profit in the second half of 2003. Since then, the sales figures from phones have been:
According to the Swedish Magazine M3s issue 7/2006 Sony Ericsson is the best-selling phone brand in the Nordic countries, followed by Nokia.
In the third quarter of 2009, Sony Ericsson became the world's fourth largest mobile phone manufacturer with 4.9% of market share after Nokia(37.8%), Samsung(21%) and LG(11%).
During E3 2007 Media and Business Summit, Phil Harrison, Sony CEO showcased a Sony Ericsson phone using the PlayStation's XMB. A select group of phones are also said to integrate into PlayStation Home (final product)
During the announcement of Sony Ericsson K850, W960 and W910 some review sites have shown that those mentioned phones and future mid-range or better phones will have Media to replace the standard File Manager which will be moved to the Organiser of the phone. Which possesses a UI that resembles the XMB interface found on Sony PS3 and PSP products. The mobile developer site confirmed from their spec sheets and white papers that the XMB media manager is standard to the phones running Java Platform 8 also known as A200 Platform and Symbian devices like Sony Ericsson Satio and Sony Ericsson Vivaz
The new Media manager to replace File Manager:
In 2009 Sony Ericsson announced that it was moving its North American headquarters from Research Triangle Park, North Carolina to Atlanta. The headquarters move was part of a plan to reduce its workforce, then 10,000 employees, by 20%. As of that year Sony Ericsson had 425 employees in Research Triangle Park; the staff had been reduced by hundreds due to layoffs.[18] Stacy Doster, a spokesperson of Sony Ericsson, said that the proximity to Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport's flights to Latin America and the operations of AT&T Mobility influenced the decision to move the USA headquarters. Sony Ericsson will close the Research Triangle site.[18][19]
Sony Ericsson ranks 2nd behind Nokia out of 18 leading electronics makers in Greenpeace’s Guide to Greener Electronics that assesses their policies on toxic chemicals, recycling and climate change. It is the first company to score full marks on all chemical criteria in the ranking.[20] Sony Ericsson is ahead of many of its competitors in eliminating chemical substances in its products. All Sony Ericsson products are free of toxic vinyl plastic (PVC) and brominated flame retardants (BFRs) except for the ongoing phase-out of a few components. It has removed antimony, beryllium and phthalate from models launched since 2008.[21] Greenpeace criticises Sony Ericssons limited take-back and recycling programme, as well as its limited use of recycled plastic in its products.[22]
Sony Ericsson Sales Sony Ericsson Sales Figures For Quarter 2 2010 Shows a Significant decline. The Sony Ericsson phone sales volume grew over the first quarter but with a modest 4.8 percent . However, it is well up to the 2009 quarter volumes varied between 13.8 and 14.6 million units. Source
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