Nokia says takeover talk 'baseless,' explains iPhone's win

updated 10:50 pm EDT, Wed June 1, 2011

Nokia CEO Elop talks takeover rumors and Apple


Nokia CEO Stephen Elop's interview at D9 Wednesday night both tackled rumors of a Microsoft takeover and an explanation for why the iPhone ousted Nokia. Answering claims by Russian leaker Eldar Murtazin that Microsoft might buy Nokia's phone division, Elop called them "baseless" and that talks had never happened. He added that smartphones were only half of Nokia's business and would have left Microsoft with a large amount of phones that didn't mesh with the Windows Phone strategy.

Observers had doubted the rumor from the start since it would have left little but Nokia's Navteq maps business and Nokia Siemens Networks.

Elop also explained Nokia's collapse in the US and ultimate defeat to the iPhone in the country as a two-stage process. The Finnish firm had peaked in 2004 with 30 to 40 percent of the market, but it gave that up when it refused to move to flip phones like the Motorola RAZR, he said. It got worse with the iPhone in 2007 as Nokia had given up its place and "wasn't in a position to hear" the changes, which had moved innovation away from Europe and towards North America.

He hoped to have "changed that" both through the switch to Windows Phone and through specific efforts. There was now a Nokia team in San Diego designing a phone intended for the North American market.

Android, MeeGo, and Windows Phone were the only real platforms discussed in the OS switch, he added. Restating his earlier stance, Elop said. Android had been ruled out as it didn't give Nokia enough potential to separate itself from the rest.

Regardless of the switch, Symbian was still surviving and leading to tens of millions of phones shipping every quarter, and could even be an advantage, according to the CEO. Since it could be used on "lower and lower" priced hardware, it could compete better at the low end than Android might. Google's platform was more viable in the executive's eyes at the high end.


By Electronista Staff

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Previous Comments

  1. Foe Hammer

    Fresh-Faced Recruit

    Joined: Feb 2005

    +1

    Now THERE is Really Some News ...

    ... I don't think anyone would have even guessed that Microsoft actually has a phone strategy.


  1. nowwhatareyoulookingat

    Fresh-Faced Recruit

    Joined: Jul 2009

    +5

    More stupidity

    Why would transporting a group of Nokia engineers from Finland to San Diego make a difference as how they would design a phone for the North American market?

    The primary reason why they are unsuccessful in the US is because they haven't been bending over and taking one for the team from all the US carriers, like their Asian competition has been doing.


  1. spyintheskyuk

    Fresh-Faced Recruit

    Joined: Nov 2009

    +4

    Interesting marketing concept

    Windows phone only offers them more ability to personalise because so few others use or successfully sell them as opposed Android. Hardly a win win situation for Nokia if their biggest advantage is because of the platforms failure to entice users.


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