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Hardware

Samsung Plans To Overhaul Its Smartphone Strategy at the Mid-range Price Point (cnbc.com) 79

Samsung Electronics plans to overhaul its smartphone strategy at the mid-range price point in order to appeal more to millennials, the company's mobile CEO has told CNBC. From the report: DJ Koh said the South Korean giant is changing its smartphone strategy for its mid-priced Galaxy A series of smartphones amid a slowdown in the handset market. Instead of introducing new technology into the flagship Galaxy S and Note series of devices, Koh said Samsung will look to bring in cutting-edge features to its cheaper models first. The first of these devices will come later this year. "In the past, I brought the new technology and differentiation to the flagship model and then moved to the mid-end. But I have changed my strategy from this year to bring technology and differentiation points starting from the mid-end," Koh told CNBC in an exclusive interview last week. The move comes amid a global smartphone slowdown with Samsung feeling a bit of the pressure. Sales in its mobile division fell 20 percent year-on-year in the second quarter of 2018 with the company attributing it to lower-than-expected sales of its high-end Galaxy S9 device.
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Samsung Plans To Overhaul Its Smartphone Strategy at the Mid-range Price Point

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  • Features? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anne Thwacks ( 531696 ) on Monday September 03, 2018 @04:48PM (#57247586)
    Never mind the features, just dump the bloat and unlock the boot loader.
    • by GuB-42 ( 2483988 )

      IIRC all Samsung smartphones are bootloader unlocked unless they are carrier branded. Flashing a new ROM is really easy using ODIN.

      I heard they toned down on the bloat lately, which, for flagships, would be a little disappointing for me. That's because with the bloat are really nice features that aren't available with other vendors, some of the best ones ended up in stock Android. That's the kind of thing that push things forwards. For the low end however, I agree that Samsung's bloat is terrible. Flagships

      • IIRC all Samsung smartphones are bootloader unlocked unless they are carrier branded.

        Nope. That's only true for the Exynos variants. The carrier unlocked phones with snapdragon CPUs have a locked down bootloader. They also make unlocking the Exynos phones very painful. With their knox efuse, you'll void your warranty even for hardware issues and the unlocking process takes like a week. Samsung is not friendly to tweakers.

        • by GuB-42 ( 2483988 )

          Ok, I looked it up and it looks like people in the US and Canada have locked bootloaders. I live in Europe so maybe that's why I didn't really get the problem.
          For the knox eFuse, they can't deny you the warranty if the cause is unrelated. I think it is the case in the EU and in the US. The "KNOX warranty void" just mean that you can't use Knox anymore, which shouldn't really matter unless it is a company issued phone. However, most of it comes from the shop policies, if one denies you a warranty repair, it

  • by bettodavis ( 1782302 ) on Monday September 03, 2018 @05:00PM (#57247624)
    Going over $1000 USD for a smartphone is just insane.

    The things aren't even different in any notorious way from last year's version. Same screen size, shape, storage, etc.
    And I don't care if the thing can track how many calories I ate just by taking a selfie while eating or tell some wisecracking jokes while doing web searches. Those new "features" aren't worth going $1000 damn dollars.
    • by CrimsonAvenger ( 580665 ) on Monday September 03, 2018 @05:15PM (#57247662)

      Going over $1000 USD for a smartphone is just insane.

      Going anywhere near $1000 USD for a phone is just insane.

      For that matter, assuming that a new phone is needed every year is insane.

      From the PoV of a phone maker, it's probably safe to assume (right now - in ten years, prolly not) that everyone will be getting a new(er) phone every five or six years. So manufacturing for replacing 15-20% of the phones every year might make sense.

      Beyond that, assuming everyone will need a more powerful phone every replacement? Nope. Maybe every third replacement? Possibly.

      With exceptions for the fashionistas among us. There'll always be a (small) market for the people who buy a phone, not to do phone things, but to show how hip (fashionable, whatever) they are. Which should keep Apple in business, anyways....

      • by Anonymous Coward

        At this point in time I think we are at peak mobile phone. I still feel no need to upgrade my 4 year old note4, as none of the newer phones provide any compelling features to make me jump, and infact take away features that my 4 year old note4 has.

        The processor on flagship phones cira 4 years ago are still plenty powerful for today's applications. The phone makers just need to come to terms they have reached saturation just like the PC market did 10 years ago with intel resting on it's laurels barely provid

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • "that everyone will be getting a new(er) phone every five or six years."

        I'm all for using stuff until it falls apart, but all my previous phones developed serious hardware issues within about three years. Nexus 5: power button stuck and battery worn out - after I spent EUR 70, I botched the battery replacement. HTC Desire S: touch screen stopped working. Nokia N82: camera broke. Dumb phone before that: couldn't make phone calls anymore and all the key labels had worn off.

        I wonder how people can make a phone

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by SuperKendall ( 25149 )

      If you buy a phone to last about two years $1k is not at all insane for something you will use all the time.

      You get a huge amount of value from a smartphone...

      • If you buy a phone to last about two years $1k is not at all insane for something you will use all the time.

        $1K for a phone is insane if you are trying to get together a down payment for a home or send your kids to college or any number of better ways to use that money. Adding insult to Apple's injury, nobody keeps a phone for just two years these days. My last phone was a flagship that lasted more than four years. It got replaced by a midrange $400 phone that looks and acts just like a flagship, and will also last four years or more. This phone does everything I want plus leaves $600 in my pocket.

        Yup, we have of

      • Really? Scoff.

        How many users are really going to take advantage of the slightly greater speeds those phones provide? I just bought last year's model top tier Motorola for $120 ( see for comments on value of purchase https://mobile.slashdot.org/st... [slashdot.org] ) . These new thousand dollar phones are offering increased values in exactly the opposite places the average user needs.

        Now, don't get me wrong. I'm a power user when it comes to PCs because I play games but unless you're big on mobile gaming or have some super

      • Two years? The technology isn't moving that fast anymore. I spent $600 on a premium phone over five years ago, and consider it money very well spent. I still haven't found an app that won't run on it because it's too old or slow.

        But the battery is old and a bit worn out now, and I'm no longer getting security updates, so I'm going to upgrade soon. I'm looking forward to getting a phone with a more convenience locking mechanism (fingerprint reader or facial camera - we'll see) and a better camera, but ot

        • Two years? The technology isn't moving that fast anymore.

          I kind of agree; my wife for example has had her phone for about three years now, will probably hold out a year or two longer.

          I myself am waiting two, but honestly the I wouldn't do so that often if not for two factors:

          1) Camera improves enough over that time I find value in an upgrade.

          2) I do mobile development and so need relatively new models to test with.

          Other than that just speed and feature improvements across the board would probably move me to

          • Oh, there's no doubt about the vast improvement of cameras over the past few years. There's a HUGE difference in the pictures I took and that of my brother (who has a recent iPhone w/ its excellent camera). Like I said, I'm looking forward to a better camera myself. But I'm not sure how much cameras can realistically improve beyond the current excellent state of the art. Once you can't tell the difference in quality anymore with the naked eye like with screen resolution, it just becomes a numbers braggi

            • But I'm not sure how much cameras can realistically improve beyond the current excellent state of the art.

              Well, the thing is there is still a vast difference between the most recent iPhone camera and my dedicated 4/3 size sensor cameras... so I think phone cameras will be improving for quite a while yet even if the sensors will stay a lot smaller. Still pretty sure I'm not upgrading the phone this year unless they do something amazing.

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • It's too late (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward

    Smart phones have are getting into the "good enough" stage where they do everything people want them to do, so customers are feeling feel less and less incentive to spend money on an upgrade. Even worse, the "upgrades" increasingly add little more than stupid novelty features that nobody really wants.

    The same thing happened with PCs, laptops and tablets. Smart phones are just the latest ones going down the same path..

  • by t4eXanadu ( 143668 ) on Monday September 03, 2018 @05:49PM (#57247786)

    I bought a Moto G5 Plus for $200 to replace my broken Galaxy phone, and let me tell you: I will never spend more than $400 on a new phone. G5 Plus is a solid midrange phone with good specs and little bloat. Best that Samsung.

    • G6+ not a whole lot more. Recommended.

      • by dj245 ( 732906 )

        G6+ not a whole lot more. Recommended.

        They aren't making the G6+ for the US market. It is missing several of the typical US frequencies and just isn't sold here. For some reason they are only selling the G6 and the G6 play in the US. I just bought a G5S+. I haven't received it yet but I didn't think it was worth the trouble to import a G6+ and hope it worked with my carrier.

    • WileyFox makes phones for about £200 - any they're decent specs. The haterz will argue they're not 100% brilliant, which they're not, but there are plenty of things wrong with the top-end dick-extension phones too.

      As for Samsung - the day they make their crappy bundled apps uninstallable is the day I'll consider buying any of their products ever again.

    • Yep, that's exactly why they're doing this: The middle tier phones are good enough for most people so people are buying more of them and fewer flagships.
      Here in Spain many people are buying Xiaomi phones which offer incredible value for the price. Samsung just can't hope to be in a good position if they don't do a major overhaul to their middle line.
  • by skam240 ( 789197 ) on Monday September 03, 2018 @05:52PM (#57247810)

    I just bought a last years model Motorola Z2 Force ( https://www.motorola.com/us/pr... [motorola.com] ) for $120 from Sprint. This is Mororola's flagship from last year.

    Now granted the Z series isn't as great as Samsung's or Apple's flagships but it's not a bad phone by a long shot and isn't that far off. The only reason I can see for most people to be paying the current prices for the latest and greatest flagships is tech nerd status which I could care less about. I feel like Samsung is wising up here and realize they can't offer anything new that matters all that much and is reorienting itself for what I feel like is the market to come.

  • ... if you charge less, you can sell more?? Get out!
  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Monday September 03, 2018 @06:37PM (#57247976)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Samsung Galaxy Note 9 in Australia is now:
    $1499 AUD RRP for the base model $1799 AUD for the 8GB / 512GB model.
    That's $1079 US / $ 1294 US

    The base iphone X is $1579 AUD and upgraded is $1829 AUD
    That's $1136 USD / $1316 USD.
    (Admittedly unlike ridiculous America, we DO include taxes in our list prices, no counter shock, ever. Thank goodness)

    Back when I first got into smartphones, the premium level Samsung was about $700 to $900 AUD, that's $650 US which is a lot of money, but if you've got a job, love you

  • A properly constructed 835 chip, 4-6 gig of ram, 64 or 128 gig of storage, OLED, 10-12mp camera with OIS is good enough for probably 99% of users. Take off the stupid flashy color garbage along with the glass backs, stick a 4,000mAH battery inside, price it for less than $400 and clean up.
  • Apple and Samsung have done so much to push up the price of a new phone that now the mid-range phone - which is hard to find at retail anywhere - costs more than the flagship phones cost not many years ago. The mid-range phone exists mostly on paper, to encourage people to go out and buy the flagship phones. Good luck finding a Samsung other than a Galaxy S8 (or newer) in any store near you. You'll never find accessories for anything else from them in a retailer either.
  • by LaughingRadish ( 2694765 ) on Monday September 03, 2018 @11:16PM (#57248796) Journal

    Bring back IR emitters.
    Bring back removable batteries.
    Keep SD card slots.
    Keep 3.5mm headphone jack.
    Get rid of rounded edge displays. They're pointless and any gimmicky effect is thwarted by cases.
    Get rid of the notch.
    Forget about edgeless displays.
    Don't lock bootloaders, or at least provide a means for any owner to unlock the bootloader at no charge.
    Keep the physical home button.
    Knock it off with Knox.

  • I'd like them to be OLED. I recently decided upon the affordable Galaxy J7 V 2nd Gen since I'm not a heavy mobile user. When I got to the store I realized that it wasn't OLED and changed my mind.

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