@monkbent Great note re: Nokia's supply/distribution, which Samsung and Apple also excel at. Where does that fit into your hierarchy model?
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@anthonyjwu i ought to redraw it to include it. Marketing too -
@monkbent Just thought interesting you suddenly mentioned them today for Nokia. Maybe they're foundation for stack? Or 2nd face of pyramid? -
@anthonyjwu foundational I think
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@monkbent what I mean is that the problem they faced is specific to marketplaces, not to mobile. -
@jtemujinw exactly. But a marketplace is a prerequisite now. That's why they should have gone Android -
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@monkbent definitely. Part of the challenge for executives in tech is the lack of analogous examples for these problems. No tried and true.
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@monkbent Easy to see now, but at that time Android success was not such a sure bet-- or at least harder to see. Too busy being behind Apple -
@MaxBulger by then the app ecosystem had taken root. Appreciate hindsight is 20/20, you'll have to take my word believed at time -
@monkbent I believe you ha. Derivatives/rate of growth probably proved your point at time, but not raw market share. More strategic blunders
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@monkbent aren't you just describing bb's failure to become a marketplace between devs and users? It's like PayPal or eBay. Hard problem.Thanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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@monkbent Great article. FWIW, maybe worth noting Samsung's domination largely started in 2010, exactly when Nokia made their poor call.Thanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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