I was saying from the get go that it was the dumbest strategy ever....
Obviously Google didn't want to sell many of the N1 to begin with.
This wasn't the Pre with Palm.
Google had a great phone(at the time).
If they really wanted to penetrate the cell phone market, they could have sold the N1 for little above cost and sell tons of them.
Getting market share should have been primary and profit should have been secondary as Google has an ungodly amount of money.
-Remember there was a big buzz with the N1.
So what did they do ??
- Partner up with the 4th largest carrier in the US.
- Decided to sell the subsidized price($180) only with single plan. No family plan.
- Their unsubsidized price was too high $550. (Like if you wanted to get on family or more plus plans)
- The biggest blunder was to sell the phone sight unseen.
While all of us geeks know what the N1 was, people that would visit the stores have no clue.
Just look at the HD2 and the Incredible. All sold out during the launch.
Epic fail by Google.
Obviously Google didn't want to sell many of the N1 to begin with.
This wasn't the Pre with Palm.
Google had a great phone(at the time).
If they really wanted to penetrate the cell phone market, they could have sold the N1 for little above cost and sell tons of them.
Getting market share should have been primary and profit should have been secondary as Google has an ungodly amount of money.
-Remember there was a big buzz with the N1.
So what did they do ??
- Partner up with the 4th largest carrier in the US.
- Decided to sell the subsidized price($180) only with single plan. No family plan.
- Their unsubsidized price was too high $550. (Like if you wanted to get on family or more plus plans)
- The biggest blunder was to sell the phone sight unseen.
While all of us geeks know what the N1 was, people that would visit the stores have no clue.
Just look at the HD2 and the Incredible. All sold out during the launch.
Epic fail by Google.