If we look at Samsung, it has good offerings in the premium space, at least for Phablets where the Note series are the indisupted king of premium Phablets. The S-series are not doing as well, but at least they are doing decent enough.
The Alpha phones were a joke. Underspecced and overpriced. Samsung used to push a lot of budget phones but they are/were junk. Which is why companies like Xiaomi, Motorola, Micromax and many others saw an opening.
Buying a sub-200 dollar phone without at least 720p is just a non-starter. The true battlefield for this is in India, which is too poor to have a high-end market(unlike China) worthy of mention.
In India, Samsung's market share is dropping drastically, which independent market research firms like IDC and Canalys are all saying(Samsung, of course, disputes this).
I'm seeing parallells here between Nokia. The same kind of assumed arrogance. Samsung is changing, but just think of a phone like the Asus Zenfone 2. Android has gotten increasingly more efficient and you don't really need the 4 GB RAM version, 2 GB is more than enough. That phone costs 200 dollars MSRP. You get what is essentially a high-end phone.
Why would anyone spend 400 dollars extra on a S6? If Samsung loses their pole position in premium, they have nowhere else to turn. Tablet sales are dropping too.
Who would be their successor? A year ago I'd say Xiaomi but people are catching up to their very fast. Even in China, Meizu is starting to eat their lunch. In India, Micromax's Yu phones are going for their Redmi. The Zenfone was already mentioned. Motorola is doing the right things, finally, and will continue to improve.
Maybe we won't have a dominant player anymore, and would that be such a bad thing?
The Alpha phones were a joke. Underspecced and overpriced. Samsung used to push a lot of budget phones but they are/were junk. Which is why companies like Xiaomi, Motorola, Micromax and many others saw an opening.
Buying a sub-200 dollar phone without at least 720p is just a non-starter. The true battlefield for this is in India, which is too poor to have a high-end market(unlike China) worthy of mention.
In India, Samsung's market share is dropping drastically, which independent market research firms like IDC and Canalys are all saying(Samsung, of course, disputes this).
I'm seeing parallells here between Nokia. The same kind of assumed arrogance. Samsung is changing, but just think of a phone like the Asus Zenfone 2. Android has gotten increasingly more efficient and you don't really need the 4 GB RAM version, 2 GB is more than enough. That phone costs 200 dollars MSRP. You get what is essentially a high-end phone.
Why would anyone spend 400 dollars extra on a S6? If Samsung loses their pole position in premium, they have nowhere else to turn. Tablet sales are dropping too.
Who would be their successor? A year ago I'd say Xiaomi but people are catching up to their very fast. Even in China, Meizu is starting to eat their lunch. In India, Micromax's Yu phones are going for their Redmi. The Zenfone was already mentioned. Motorola is doing the right things, finally, and will continue to improve.
Maybe we won't have a dominant player anymore, and would that be such a bad thing?