Guo
Ping, deputy chairman of Huawei Technologies, the world's fifth-largest
smartphone maker, reckons the Chinese firm's phones are unbeatable in
terms of hardware, and pours water on market distinctions between high-
and low-end models.
Huawei, probably better
known as a leading telecoms gear maker under fire from US politicians
over its potential links to the Chinese state, is looking to drive sales
of its consumer devices, but is hobbled by not having effective
consumer retail channels. Traditionally, it co-brands its devices with
carriers.
In an interview on Friday, Guo told
Reuters he sees this changing as Huawei shifts from focusing on the
technology in its devices to better understanding consumers' tastes and
perceptions.
"In some ways, (designing) a
smartphone is in the middle of Silicon Valley and Hollywood," he said.
"Silicon Valley represents technology -- and smartphones need strong
technology -- and the Hollywood aspect is about experience and
perception."
"It's like your beloved pet, you
can't leave it. This is how we think about Huawei's consumer brand. It
needs to be between Hollywood and Silicon Valley," he said on the
sidelines of a business conference in Chengdu in southwestern China.
The
consumer device push comes at a critical time for Huawei's
telecommunication equipment business, which ranks behind Sweden's
Ericsson in terms of market share and faces greater scrutiny from
governments worldwide.
Just as Huawei tries to
convince the West it's a safe company to do business with, a British
parliamentary committee report on Thursday slammed the way in which
ministers were not fully informed about a multi-billion pound deal for
Huawei to supply equipment to BT Group in 2005.
Huawei,
founded in 1987 by Ren Zhengfei, a former People's Liberation Army
officer, has repeatedly denied it has links with the Chinese government
or military and has said it receives no financial support from the
government.
Making splash
Huawei
expects sales of its consumer devices to increase to $9 billion this
year from $8 billion last year, and predicts it will ship around 60
million smartphones - double last year's total, when the consumer
business group brought in 22% of the group's total 220 billion yuan ($36
billion) revenue.
By 2017, almost all mobiles
sold in China will be smartphones -- about 460 million of them,
according to research firm IDC said -- as increasingly wealthy consumers
opt for more feature-filled phones.
To get a
bigger slice of that market, Huawei needs to improve its brand image,
analysts say, to compete with Apple and Samsung, aspirational brands
that draw devotees to product launches and see fans queue for hours for
the latest gadgets.
"Most of the time they only
deal with telecom operators so they are not so familiar to deal with
the retail distributors," said Huang Leping, a Nomura analyst based in
Hong Kong. "In terms of industrial design they have improved but I think
the biggest obstacle is brand awareness, consistency and quality given
they are very new to non-Chinese consumers."
An
Interbrands 2012 "Best China Brands" report did not include Huawei even
in the top-50. Computer maker Lenovo Group, China's second-largest
smartphone maker, ranked 15th, and last month enlisted NBA basketball
star Kobe Bryant to market its P780 smartphone in China, where the game
has a huge following.
Guo isn't too fazed by that, and believes making better phones will lead to better sales.
"We
don't have a requirement to be of a certain (brand) ranking, but we
believe that if we do (the devices) well, it will have a good outcome in
itself," he said.
Huawei's branding push comes after years of churning out lower-end smartphones. Going upmarket could plump up margins.
"Consumers
are pretty smart," said TZ Wong, an IDC analyst. "Once they see a lower
price, they might have some doubts, but once they find it's good value
for money, that's where brands such as Huawei have a chance to make a
mark."
Guo doesn't see the smartphone world in
such simple terms as high-end or low-end, and sets his bar at simply
delivering what consumers want in a phone - such as waterproof models.
During
the interview, he placed two Huawei smartphones on the table and asked:
"Are these high-end?" He then dropped one phone into a bowl holding
candies and poured water over it.
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