Stop speaking, start snapping:
NEC's mission to make the world see in 3G

By Giovanni Paci in Tokyo
22 August 2004

http://news.independent.co.uk/business/analysis_and_features/story.jsp?story=553795

Europe and North America are behind the times, says
Tsutomu Nakamura from NEC of Japan. "They still use
the mobile phone as a phone. Based on what has
happened in Japan, things are going to change rather
quickly."

As senior vice-president of the group's mobile
business unit, his task is "to make NEC one of the
three most profitable mobile phone suppliers worldwide
in three years". And getting people to use their phone
for more than talking is the key.

It looks a tough call. In the financial year to the
end of March, NEC delivered only 15.5 million handsets
- a fraction of the 180.7 million posted by Nokia of
Finland and far fewer than other top players such us
Motorola (72.2 million), Samsung (54.5 million),
Siemens (43.8 millions) and Sony-Ericsson (26.7
million). In its last financial year NEC went back
into profit after two years of heavy losses and a deep
restructuring throughout the corporation. NEC sees its
mobile communication business as a big profit
generator over the next few years.

"We are the market leader in 3G phones - those fitted
with high-resolution camera and video devices," claims
Mr Nakamura. "In the mid- to high-end segment, our
market share is 50 per cent as we are undisputed
leaders in Japan." From the observation lounge on the
top floor of NEC's headquarters in Tokyo, executives
have a good view of the HQs of two of their key
customers - DoCoMo and the Japanese arm of Vodafone.

After its success at home, NEC expects its 3G phones
to take on the world. Its plan to get to the top is
based on being an early player in this market as well
as on the stronghold it claims in one fast-growing
economy. In mainland China, mobile technology is still
at 2.5G level and NEC claims a 10 per cent market
share, or around seven million handsets sold last
year.

Mr Nakamura recognises that the 3G game will mostly be
played in Europe, where some 15 months after early
mover Hutchison Whampoa launched its "3" brand, all
the big operators are entering the arena. NEC has a
deal worth $2.8bn (£1.5bn) to supply six million
handsets to 3 in the three years to 2006.

"Europe is not a uniform market: in the north, mainly
the UK and Germany, it is still voice-driven, while in
Italy and Spain the 3G development will be faster."

After suffering a handset shortage last year, NEC has
restructured its supply chain, with two new
contractors in China that now build half of the annual
capacity of 25 million. "As volume rises, we'll rely
more on contractors, retaining at our Japan factories
only the start-up production of new models", says Mr
Nakamura, who claims the problems that beset the NEC
video phones delivered to 3 last year are over. "This
is being totally overtaken as the 3G network improves
in quality," adds NEC executive manager Susumu Otani.

While consumers still wonder whether to switch on 3G,
the industry is taking the next step: the 3.5G phone
will be rolled out in Japan in less than six months.
"It allows more speed at a lower cost. By the end of
2005 we'll get up to 10 megabytes per second, making
it possible to get terrestrial digital TV on the
handsets," Mr Nakamura says.

Will this be enough to tempt consumers in their
droves? In Mr Otani's view, maybe not: "The real
growth will come when the flat-rate concept that has
made fixed-line broadband successful is extended to
mobile broadband." 





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