Sony Ericsson: A Short History
Posted: Thursday, September 10, 2009
by Paul Wise
website services group
Sony Ericsson is a joint-venture between the Japanese consumer electronics giant Sony Corporation and the Swedish telecommunications firm of Ericsson. It was felt that the combination of Sony's consumer electronics expertise with Ericsson's technological leadership in the communications industry would allow both companies to gain more market share than they have had individually as competitors. With their home office in Hammersmith, London and research and development teams in Sweden, Japan, China, Germany, the United States, India, Pakistan and the United Kingdom, Sony Ericsson was the fifth-largest mobile phone manufacturer in the world after Nokia, Samsung, LG, and Motorola as of 2008. The company had, during that same year, approximately 9,400 employees and 2,500 contractors around the globe.
Despite the aim of profitability their very first year, Ericsson's market share actually fell and it would be only a year later that the company decided to stop making mobile phones and end the partnership if business didn't pick up, while Sony stated that it was still fully committed to the joint venture and wanted to make it a success. In 2003, the two companies agreed to pump more money into their project in response to continuing losses. The strategy was to release new models capable of digital photography as well as other multimedia capabilities. Several new models were introduced which featured on-board digital cameras and full-color screens, exciting novelties for that time. Despite booming sales, the partnership kept posting ever-bigger losses, with projected profitability rescheduled even further back.
Sony Ericsson's most recent best-sellers are its Walkman and Cyber-Shot lines of multimedia phones. The company had been on a turn-around until the last quarter of 2008, which saw a devastating 97 percent drop in profits and the layoff of 2,000 employees. Sony Ericsson is the third largest manufacturer of mobile handsets in the world, after rivals Nokia and Samsung, but commands only slightly more than 8 percent of global market share. Figures dropped after three consecutive years of increased sales. There are recurrent fears that Sony Ericsson, along with struggling rival Motorola, may one day bow out of the cell phone industry altogether.
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Written by Paul Wise after extensive research on Sony Ericsson. If you want to save money by buying used cell phones or refurbished cell phones, visit ZoomWirelessOnline.com.
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