Samsung's 'Beat Apple' memo: 'Threat from Apple extremely real and urgent'

Posted:
in iPhone edited April 2014
While the tech media has devoted lots of attention to Apple's concerned reaction to Samsung's 2012 marketing blitz, evidence likely to be presented during the Apple vs Samsung trial shows that it was Samsung that targeted its attention on "beating Apple" as its "#1 priority" for 2012.

Samsung Beat Apple memo

"Beating Apple is #1 Priority"


An internal document obtained by AppleInsider detailing Samsung's "lessons learned" in 2011 and its business forecast for 2012 (involved in the second Apple vs. Samsung trial this week) outlines that not only did Samsung see "Beating Apple is #1 Priority" but also that "everything must be context of beating Apple."

Samsung noted at the end of 2011, the year Apple filed its initial lawsuits against Samsung, that the "threat from Apple is extremely real and urgent (up to 12.2M sell-in in 4Q)." "Threat from Apple is extremely real and urgent" - Samsung

For 2012, Samsung outlined expectations that Apple's upcoming iPhone 5 would appear in June 2012, featuring "LTE, social networking, cloud integration, CE integration, improved SIRI."

The document noted Apple's competitive pricing and predicted Apple would sell ">40M units = $20B+ iPhone revenue, $12B iPhone profit, 21% share (#2 overall)." Apple went on to sell 150 million phones in fiscal 2013 after it launched iPhone 5 in September (two weeks before the fiscal year began); most of those sales were iPhone 5.

Samsung's analysis of Apple as an "extremely real and urgent" threat and the company's clear understanding of what Apple would release in 2012 and how well it expected iPhone 5 to perform through 2013 is the complete opposite of what the tech media was reporting about Apple throughout 2012 and into 2013.

Instead, industry reporters described iPhone 5 as being a disappointing product and characterized its record setting launch as being disappointing sales, while Apple itself was repeatedly written about as being a ghost of its former self and "not innovative enough."

"Greatly increased Galaxy Branding"

Samsung's response to the innovative threat it saw in Apple's continually improving and strongly profitable, high demand iPhone was simply "continuous" advertising of its own Galaxy brand.

"Galaxy," which was originally Samsung's brand for iPhone-class premium devices originally styled upon Apple's iPhone and iPad designs, should be repurposed to "brand more handsets," Samsung detailed in the document. "Galaxy S for premium models, Galaxy for other high/mid tier smartphones."

Samsung Galaxy


Samsung also released very low-end Galaxy Y "mass market" phones with anemic specifications that make it hard to still call it a "smartphone." The 3G-only Android 2.x Galaxy Y incorporates an ARMv6 chip, 290MB of RAM, a 2MP camera and a 3 inch, 240x320 screen, hardware specs inferior to Apple's iPhone 3G from 2008.

Galaxy Y


Despite popular reporting that seemed to portray Samsung as being a favorite brand, the company itself revealed that during the release-year of iPhone 5, Samsung's higher end phone sales flattened out, while its volume unit sales growth same mostly from "mass market" models like the cheap, very low end Galaxy Y.

Samsung also detailed a strategy of "continuous" branding campaigns where "Galaxy Nexus rolls into Galaxy Note into GSIII," playing upon Apple's consistent branding of iPhone across generations of its products.

"Drive consumer pull," Samsung's Galaxy branding document strategized, hoping that "customers walk into stores asking for Samsung." To get there, Samsung said it needed to "understand why customers buy Apple," and then "develop countermeasures by carrier/retail."

Samsung also set a goal to "maintain retail positioning on premium handsets (increase marketing investment)." Despite a very expensive branding effort in 2012 and 2013 however, Samsung's share of premium handsets has come primarily at the expense of other Android makers.

Apple sold over 150 million iPhones in 2013, compared to two-thirds as many premium handsets shipped by Samsung. Even Apple's iPhone 5c, which has been broadly mocked as a flop by the media, managed to significantly outsell Samsung's high end flagship Galaxy S 4 model during the critical holiday sales season.

Samsung had to follow carriers' demands for mostly cheap phones

Despite being the world's largest Android licensee and the only other significantly profitable phone maker outside of Apple, Samsung recognized that 80 percent of its product portfolio needed to serve the needs of carriers, while only 20 percent of its phones could serve Samsung's own initiatives.

"Request carrier support for 20% of roadmap (i.e. GSIII and special Samsung projects such as Galaxy Note)," Samsung's strategy document outlined.

The company devoted most of its product offerings to filling carrier needs however, noting, "80% of roadmap will support carrier initiatives: joint projects for key carrier initiatives, carrier exclusive offerings, possibility of non-exclusive, low cost handset to address entry tier?"Samsung formulated a response for 2012 that focused on cheap, low end phones and spending billions to overwhelm the market with brand advertising

Samsung's strategy document indicates that not only did Samsung recognize the "urgent threat" posed by Apple, but that it formulated a response for 2012 that focused on cheap, low end phones and spending billions to overwhelm the market with brand advertising

Further, despite the obviousness of this strategy, Samsung was able to coax bloggers and mainstream media sources to report the opposite of what was happening, seeding the idea that Apple was no longer an innovative threat, that customers were choosing the high end experience offered by Samsung, and even that Samsung had the capability to offer whatever "special" products it could develop without regard for the carriers who sold its products.
«13456

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 109
    hydrogenhydrogen Posts: 314member
    Slide in a very "powerpoint" style ..... No class ...
  • Reply 2 of 109
    ninuolaninuola Posts: 24member
    This company is such a disgrace. They are so annoying Geez! To actively try to copy a successful company this much.
  • Reply 3 of 109
    danielswdanielsw Posts: 906member
    No one or nothing survives for long on lies.
  • Reply 4 of 109
    chipsychipsy Posts: 287member
    DED, this must be one of the most subjective interpretations of what is a normal market analysis PowerPoint ever. The slide is nothing more than that, every company will have slides like this (including Apple). And then such wording as 'Samsung's response to the innovative threat it saw in Apple's continually improving and strongly profitable..,' while the slide says nothing about Apple's innovation to be the threat (to be clear I'm not stating that Apple isn't an innovative company). This is clearly a slide about market analysis and brand recognition thus the threat is most likely Apple's market share and its iconic brand recognition.
    One of your most desperate attempts to vilify of late I must say. I'm not a Samsung supporter but this seems to be a case of trying to get something out of nothing by loose and subjective interpretation.
    P.s.: a company that wants to beat its biggest competitor, shocking! :)
  • Reply 5 of 109
    Which phone do you think I should get the note 3 or 5s?
  • Reply 6 of 109
    thedbathedba Posts: 763member
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Brandon Powell View Post



    Q: is Apple a innovative threat?

    A: no

    Let me guess!

    You work for "Business Insider".

     

    Great analysis there.

  • Reply 7 of 109
    'understand why consumers buy Apple and develop countermeasures by carrier/retailer'

    Encapsulated in eleven words, the grotesque wickedness lying in the heart of Samsung.

    In the words of Steve Jobs—wow, wow, wow.
  • Reply 8 of 109
    rogifanrogifan Posts: 10,669member
    Let me guess....when it comes to the media reporting on this it will be crickets....
  • Reply 9 of 109
    rogifanrogifan Posts: 10,669member
    chipsy wrote: »
    DED, this must be one of the most subjective interpretations of what is a normal market analysis PowerPoint ever. The slide is nothing more than that, every company will have slides like this (including Apple). And then such wording as 'Samsung's response to the innovative threat it saw in Apple's continually improving and strongly profitable..,' while the slide says nothing about Apple's innovation to be the threat (to be clear I'm not stating that Apple isn't an innovative company). This is clearly a slide about market analysis and brand recognition thus the threat is most likely Apple's market share and its iconic brand recognition.
    One of your most desperate attempts to vilify of late I must say. I'm not a Samsung supporter but this seems to be a case of trying to get something out of nothing by loose and subjective interpretation.
    P.s.: a company that wants to beat its biggest competitor, shocking! :)
    None of Apple's leaked documents were shocking either. But they got plenty of attention. So I don't see why this doesn't deserve the same.
  • Reply 10 of 109
    tastowetastowe Posts: 108member
    The stupid Samsung CEO ideas are very bad
  • Reply 11 of 109
    chipsychipsy Posts: 287member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Rogifan View Post





    None of Apple's leaked documents were shocking either. But they got plenty of attention. So I don't see why this doesn't deserve the same.

    I agree, Apple's leaked documents weren't shocking either. If anything it just showed that Apple is a company like any other, keeping competition in mind while catching up where necessary and where possible try to improve on/one up the competition. I just thought that the interpretation by DED in this case was particularly far fetched and therefor left the comment to address this. 

  • Reply 12 of 109
    crowleycrowley Posts: 10,453member

    Competitor has strategy. Amazing news.

  • Reply 13 of 109
    genovellegenovelle Posts: 1,480member
    chipsy wrote: »
    I agree, Apple's leaked documents weren't shocking either. If anything it just showed that Apple is a company like any other, keeping competition in mind while catching up where necessary and where possible try to improve on/one up the competition. I just thought that the interpretation by DED in this case was particularly far fetched and therefor left the comment to address this. 
    Did you read the document at all? He merely outline what they said.
  • Reply 14 of 109
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Rogifan View Post





    None of Apple's leaked documents were shocking either. But they got plenty of attention. So I don't see why this doesn't deserve the same.

    They got way more attention than they should have. Everyone keeps an eye on what the competition is doing. The difference though is Apple is clearly the leader, top dog, #1 smartphone vendor. You expect those that are not to be more worried about the leader than the leader worried about the follower. Apple does a great job of largely publicly ignoring competition in general, so any change in tone comes across as a surprise to some. 

     

    EDIT: added publicly.

  • Reply 15 of 109
    chipsychipsy Posts: 287member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by genovelle View Post





    Did you read the document at all? He merely outline what they said.

    Yep I did, and it's nothing more than a normal market analysis. Yet DED then tries to tie this to unfavorable news in mainstream media about Apple and innovation and how this document supposedly proves that Samsung is scared of Apple's innovation thus the media was wrong. And to be clear I'm not saying the media was right, there is a lot of Apple bashing articles out there. But the document proves nothing more then that Samsung was focused on beating its largest competitor and as it is a market analysis slide (with some brand recognition) that threat should be interpreted as market share and brand recognition. Not in the way of innovation (and again to be clear I'm not stating Apple isn't an innovative company, it's just that the slide doesn't present this). There is quite some personal opinion and interpretation in this article and should at least have been labeled as an editorial. (not to mention that the article has an undertone of labeling Samsung as nothing but a follower)

  • Reply 16 of 109
    dasanman69dasanman69 Posts: 13,002member
    'understand why consumers buy Apple and develop countermeasures by carrier/retailer'

    Encapsulated in eleven words, the grotesque wickedness lying in the heart of Samsung.

    In the words of Steve Jobs—wow, wow, wow.

    I'd really like to know how you equate that to lying.
  • Reply 17 of 109
    freediverxfreediverx Posts: 1,423member
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Brandon Powell View Post



    Which phone do you think I should get the note 3 or 5s?

     

    Depends on your needs. If you want a top quality smartphone backed up by a seamless ecosystem from a company that respects its customers, choose the 5S. If you want a plastic sunshade with a non-upgradable operating system and lots of malware from a company closely aligned with the interests of cell phone carriers then the Note 3 might be a good choice.

  • Reply 18 of 109

    i know, straight to the point. 

  • Reply 19 of 109
    genovellegenovelle Posts: 1,480member
    chipsy wrote: »
    Yep I did, and it's nothing more than a normal market analysis. Yet DED then tries to tie this to unfavorable news in mainstream media about Apple and innovation and how this document supposedly proves that Samsung is scared of Apple's innovation thus the media was wrong. And to be clear I'm not saying the media was right, there is a lot of Apple bashing articles out there. But the document proves nothing more then that Samsung was focused on beating its largest competitor and as it is a market analysis slide (with some brand recognition) that threat should be interpreted as market share and brand recognition. Not in the way of innovation (and again to be clear I'm not stating Apple isn't an innovative company, it's just that the slide doesn't present this). There is quite some personal opinion and interpretation in this article and should at least have been labeled as an editorial.
    When a company who has been proven to copy Apple's products and fined in other countries for planting false information about competitors to gain the upper hand, has a marketing plan that is focused entirely on beating a company that according to the media, had already lost to Samsung it telling. You seem pretty willing to ignore Samsung's own words to disagree with DED. Odd?
  • Reply 20 of 109

    Whats "non-upgradeable" about android? And what phone do you have?

Sign In or Register to comment.