Smartphone customers losing faith in
Samsung have plenty of choice at a time when Apple, Google, LG and China’s
Huawei are each pushing new models that up the features ante and do not
self-combust.
The first rule in a corporate crisis is to
staunch the bleeding. However, PR experts say, Samsung Electronics bungled in
not just misdiagnosing the fault afflicting its top-end phones but appearing
uncommunicative with an aloof bedside manner.
As a result, the South Korean company has its
work cut out as it embarks on a vast and costly exercise to win back trust and
prove that it is still a byword for quality at a time when its rivals are going
full tilt in the smartphone wars.
“The basis of crisis management is to make
sure that when you give a solution, it’s the right solution and it is going to
enable you to move forward,” Andy Holdsworth, a crisis management specialist.
That has not been the case with Samsung.
Perhaps reluctant to lose too much ground to rivals, who were busy launching
their own new models, the company rushed out replacements for its Galaxy Note 7
‘phablet’ series when some in the first global batch spontaneously caught fire.
The incendiary problem persisted, however,
and now Samsung has been forced to scrap the entire line in an embarrassing
setback for a brand image that took years to build up.
Some airplanes had banned passengers from
boarding with the phones. Social media is rife with anger and ridicule. One
video, of a Burger King employee gingerly handling a smoking Note 7 with oven
gloves, has gone viral.
Mr Holdsworth said Samsung’s response
throughout had been ‘disjointed’. “You kind of lose faith in it because your
remedy suffered the same problem and this problem is quite a dangerous one,” he
added.
“The loss of sales from the Galaxy Note is
only the tip of the iceberg,” warned analyst Jasper Lawler. “Demand for the
flagship Galaxy S8, scheduled for release early next year, could be severely
impeded by the loss of consumer confidence in the Samsung brand.”
It could be worse. There has been no loss
of life. And other companies have also struggled with the challenge of
extracting more power and faster charge times from the lithium-ion technology
used in smartphones today.
Boeing suffered electrical fires from the
lithium-ion batteries aboard its new 787 jet.
There may be no quick fix to undo the past
few weeks, during which it appeared that Samsung’s official response appeared
to lag that of national regulators, airlines and mobile phone carriers.
But Samsung should at least shed any
inhibitions it may feel about being more forthright with its customers, said
Yves Robert-Paul, who heads crisis communications for advertising group Havas.
Since the company started recalling the phablets last month, he claimed, it offered
only ‘a pragmatic response, devoid of all emotion’. “They’ve run it like an
industrial disaster but they forgot to think about their customers.”
But City Index’s Ken Odeluga said that
nobody wants to believe Samsung has ‘lost its touch’ at producing beautiful and
advanced consumer technology. “So there is some underlying sentiment that views
its problems as the kind of bad luck which could afflict almost any smartphone
maker that is pushing boundaries,” he said.
Meanwhile, all of Samsung’s competitors are
‘rubbing their hands in glee’, said Thomas Husson, an analyst with the
Forrester technology research and consultancy firm. “It’s basically a good
product, released at the right time, but a slip-up, and we’ve seen in the past
with Nokia or Blackberry that these can have disastrous effects.”
While it is too early to predict a similar
disappearance from the phone market of the South Korean company, rivals are
nipping at the heels of the market leader. These include not only Apple, LG and
Chinese companies like Huawei, but also internet titan Google, which entered
the smartphone market last week with its own device - the Pixel.
“There will inevitably be some
moderate-to-marginal benefit for Samsung’s handset rivals, more particularly
Apple, perhaps faster-growing Huawei can benefit more from Samsung’s Note 7
travails,” said analyst Ken Odeluga.
One of the largest providers of network
infrastructure globally, Huawei has been pushing into the smartphone market,
including the top-end segment with its P9 model that features a camera with two
Leica lenses.
And the LG G2 smart phone made its debut at
a news conference in the US this month.
The blow to Samsung is unlikely to be
fatal, however. “Competitors might enjoy a short-term boost to sales as a
result of a major player having to withdraw its new model, though overall it is
likely to remain a competitive market,” believes analyst Laith Khalaf.