HTC One looks great. But will anyone care?
analysist CNET looks at the fundamental problem plaguing the company:
the lack of marketing muscle.
The HTC One.
(Credit: Sarah Tew / CBS
Interactive)
As sexy as the HTC One is, it is
doomed to failure if the company doesn't quickly shake things up.
HTC's design and software teams did
their jobs in creating an attractive, unique, and premium-feeling phone, taking
Apple's love for metal construction and taking it to the next logical
progression.
But guess what? HTC's One family of
phones met with similar critical praise last year, yet failed to reverse its flagging revenue and profits. While HTC has had a
history of showing off buzz-worthy products, dating back to the first Android
smartphone in the G1 and the first 4G phone in the Evo 4G, the company has more
recently shown a troubling trend: the tendency to get ignored in the
marketplace.
It's the reality of the smartphone
business and a key dilemma for a company like HTC, which lacks the marketing
firepower that larger rivals Apple and Samsung enjoy. This year will be a
critical one for HTC, which needs to prove that it can still compete in the
increasingly duopolistic market. History has already shown that a sexy, new
product just enough anymore.
"HTC is going up against two of
the biggest spenders in the world with intensely loyal followings," said
Avi Greengart, an analyst at Current Analysis.
So HTC needs to do a few things it
hasn't been comfortable doing in the past. For one, it'll need to get more
proactive with its own marketing. It's something the company has always
half-heartedly done in the past, but it will need to work harder to develop
both the One brand and the HTC name. Apple and Samsung are household names, and
while HTC was seemingly on its way to becoming one just a few years ago, it
lost its way.
"I think they need to invest a
tremendous amount in marketing," Greengart said.
The company will also need to break
from its traditional reliance on the carriers for support, and stop kowtowing
to all of their needs. That's a particularly difficult one because that had
been HTC's tentpole strategy for so long. But as Apple and Samsung have moved
beyond carrier exclusives and customizing phones, HTC must do the same.
HTC appears to be on the right
track. The company plans to roughly double its global marketing budget from a
year ago, as it embarks on a new campaign, according to Erin McGee, vice
president of marketing for HTC's North American business. The company plans to
be the second or third largest advertiser in the industry during the launch
period.
But in acknowledging the relative
limits of HTC's marketing resources when stacked against its rivals, McGee said
the company would target tech-savvy adults aged 18 to 34 through digital
advertising and social media. While the company wouldn't talk about the details
of the campaign, McGee said that in the U.S., HTC would run its promotions
alongside music events it plans to organize through its Beats partnership.
(Credit:
Sarah Tew / CBS Interactive)
HTC executives also conceded that
they had relied too much on the carriers in the past, and vowed to take more of
a direct role in the purchasing experiencing. McGee said a lot of the advertising
would focus on generating awareness and demand before the consumer went into
the store, so there would be less reliance on a carrier salesperson.
"This is by far our best
device, and it's our job to make sure people know about it," she said,
noting that the campaign would be much more focused than before.
HTC plans to get some support from
Best Buy, which it mentioned as being another distribution outlet beyond
AT&T, Sprint Nextel, and T-Mobile USA.
Best Buy plans to jointly run some
national commercials featuring the HTC One, according to Alistair Jones, head
of marketing for the big-box retail chain's connectivity business group. He
added this was the most resources that Best Buy has put behind HTC in at least
18 months.
Likewise, the HTC One will be
featured prominently in Best Buy's stores, occupying one of the coveted
"end caps" of the mobile area, where the latest and greatest are
displayed.
Jones conceded that he was really
worried about HTC's products over the past few years, but said he was excited
about the One.
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