Motorola's new CEO Brown trying to end slump without a Razr-like hit
New Motorola Inc. CEO Greg Brown does not have the secret weapon his predecessor Ed Zander possessed when he arrived at the cell phone maker four years ago _ the Razr.
CHICAGO: New Motorola Inc. CEO Greg Brown does not have the secret weapon his predecessor Ed Zander possessed when he arrived at the cell phone maker four years ago _ the Razr.
But that could be a good thing _ if Brown, who took over Tuesday as chief executive, applies lessons learned from Motorola's nasty fall last year.
The then-up-and-coming Razr ultimately proved Zander's undoing. It propelled the Schaumburg, Illinois-based company to lofty sales levels it could not sustain without cutting prices aggressively, a decision that had harsh consequences.
The once-soaring company is now thought to have only broken even for 2007. It pulled back from some developing markets and cut 7,500 jobs last year, creating a leaner company that analysts say has halted its free fall in market share and profitability, and laid the groundwork for a promised turnaround.
``People might think Motorola's out of the game entirely,'' said Neil Strother, a wireless analyst in Seattle for Jupiter Research. ``They're not out of the game, they've just had a few bad quarters.''
Such a blockbuster announcement from Motorola is likelier at the big wireless shows _ in Barcelona in February or Las Vegas in April. But nothing the company is known to have in the pipeline seems likely to match the Razr's popularity.
While putting its financial and operational house back in order, Motorola must regain ground lost to industry leader Nokia Corp. and Samsung Electronics Co., which overtook Motorola as the No. 2 cell phone manufacturer last year.
``The challenges for Greg Brown are very similar to those that were faced by Ed Zander: to work on innovation and new products,'' said Hugues de la Vergne, principal analyst with market research firm Gartner Inc. in Stamford, Conn. ``A more steady stream of innovative new products from the likes of Samsung and Nokia have allowed them to build nice market-share gains at Motorola's expense.''
Motorola ``milked the Razr phone cow for too long,'' said Morningstar analyst Jordan Zounis, and it's still paying the price. Zounis sees strength in the company's mid-price products, including its revamped Razr line and new multimedia phones, but weakness on both the high end _ with only the Motorola Q smart phone _ and low end.
``Brown has about nine months to show the new and improved Motorola,'' Zounis said Wednesday. ``Otherwise, I think the callings of individuals such as Carl Icahn will perhaps have a little bit more weight next time around.''
Brown is likely to be judged negatively unless he can improve results from its trademark handset business _ even if Motorola's emergency radios, TV set-top boxes, wireless network equipment and other lines show strength.
``If Motorola stays with the same portfolio of handsets they're going to have trouble, because the market is evolving,'' said Standard & Poor's analyst Todd Rosenbluth.
The Economic Times Business News App for the Latest News in Business, Sensex, Stock Market Updates & More.
The Economic Times News App for Quarterly Results, Latest News in ITR, Business, Share Market, Live Sensex News & More.