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Nokia Ditches Sales Chief as Smartphone Disappoints

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Nokia ditched its sales chief and promised to slash more costs, as the Finnish cell phone maker runs out of time to reinvent itself under pressure from Smartphone rivals.

Analysts said Chief Executive Stephen Elop had until the end of the year to improve sales of the new Lumia smart phones – Nokia’s main weapon in its fight against rivals Apple and Samsung Electronics – before investors started to question his strategy.

Elop, who launched Nokia’s turnaround plan in February 2011, said sales of the new Windows-based Lumia phones on which the company is pinning its hopes have been mixed.

“We exceeded expectations in markets including the United States, but establishing momentum in certain markets, including the UK, has been more challenging,” he said. “Clearly we are disappointed by our performance in the first quarter.”

Nokia said Colin Giles, head of sales, would leave the firm in June as it restructures the team to help speed up sales. His boss, markets unit chief Niklas Savander will take on Giles’ duties.

Gartner analyst Carolina Milanesi said Elop’s job was safe for now. “It is too early to be talking about a new CEO. I would say Elop has until February 2013 – two years from when it all started – to prove its strategy was the right one. This timing gives him the new version of the Windows phone operating system and the holiday season,” she said.

Nokia is switching to Microsoft’s Windows operating system to make its phones more competitive against Apple’s iPhone and Samsung’s Galaxy range, which uses Google’s Android software, as Reuters stated.

China-based Giles had worked at Nokia since 1992 and played a key role in building the company’s business in Asia – a region where it now faces tough competition from lower-priced rivals. Phone sales in China fell 62 percent in the first quarter from a year earlier.

 

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