Huawei punishes staff with pay cuts for marketing tweet sent via iPhone
Chinese smartphone giant Huawei has issued harsh punishments to two of its staff in the aftermath of New Year's Day marketing tweet sent out with the label "via Twitter for iPhone."

Both of the workers have been demoted one rank and had their monthly salaries cut by 5,000 yuan, or about $728, according to an internal memo seen by Reuters. One person, the company's digital marketing director, will have his pay rank frozen for a year.
The memo indicated that an outsourced social media firm, Sapient, encountered "VPN problems" with a desktop it was using for publishing, so instead turned to an iPhone with a roaming SIM card to trigger the message at midnight on New Year's. Twitter is normally blocked in China, so a VPN (virtual private network) is a commonplace tool for reaching it.
The post -- which read "Happy #2019" -- was almost immediately deleted, but not before screenshots made their way to social networks like Weibo, where they were roundly mocked.
Huawei has had similar embarassments in the past. A notable example was when Israeli actress Gal Gadot, serving as a paid ambassador, promoted the Mate 10 Pro on Twitter but used her iPhone to do it.
The illusion of brand unity has become important at smartphone makers around the world, especially given the intense competition between iPhone and Android as platforms. In reality workers will often have devices from rival companies, even at Apple, though corporate leaders sometimes take measures to deter this.
Huawei likely has little to worry about in the near future, as Chinese iPhone sales were poor enough in the December quarter to trigger this week's guidance downgrade. That sent Apple shares plummeting, and prompted CEO Tim Cook to promise management would "take action" to put the company on the right course.

Both of the workers have been demoted one rank and had their monthly salaries cut by 5,000 yuan, or about $728, according to an internal memo seen by Reuters. One person, the company's digital marketing director, will have his pay rank frozen for a year.
The memo indicated that an outsourced social media firm, Sapient, encountered "VPN problems" with a desktop it was using for publishing, so instead turned to an iPhone with a roaming SIM card to trigger the message at midnight on New Year's. Twitter is normally blocked in China, so a VPN (virtual private network) is a commonplace tool for reaching it.
The post -- which read "Happy #2019" -- was almost immediately deleted, but not before screenshots made their way to social networks like Weibo, where they were roundly mocked.
Huawei has had similar embarassments in the past. A notable example was when Israeli actress Gal Gadot, serving as a paid ambassador, promoted the Mate 10 Pro on Twitter but used her iPhone to do it.
The illusion of brand unity has become important at smartphone makers around the world, especially given the intense competition between iPhone and Android as platforms. In reality workers will often have devices from rival companies, even at Apple, though corporate leaders sometimes take measures to deter this.
Huawei likely has little to worry about in the near future, as Chinese iPhone sales were poor enough in the December quarter to trigger this week's guidance downgrade. That sent Apple shares plummeting, and prompted CEO Tim Cook to promise management would "take action" to put the company on the right course.
Comments
that’s needed to be said. What was an iPhone doing there? Obviously, someone on staff prefers it over the brand they are representing in their job. So that deserves a good laugh at the expense of Huawei.
Beyond that, the company has now admitted it uses VPN software to access Twitter, circumventing the will of the Chinese government. Wonder if someone at Huawei should perhaps be docked a few months pay for that. Maybe the CEO.
Best
No, they're like Samsung. They need to have iPhones around to see what to copy next. Except with Huawei it's not look & feel, but more likely trying to pry secrets from the internals.
As to using a VPN, I'm sure Chinese authorities aren't concerned about bending the rules when it's to promote their own companies or interests. They just don't want private citizens doing it.
”Huawei in the memo said the blunder showed procedural incompliance and management oversight. It said it had demoted two employees responsible by one rank and reduced their monthly salaries by 5,000 yuan ($728.27).
The pay rank of one of the employees - Huawei’s digital marketing director - will also be frozen for 12 months, it said.”
Even the top CEOs running android use iPhone.