Thursday, 16 August 2012

The secret to Samsung’s massive success: Attack every corner of your home


Samsung Revenue Growth 2012
Samsung (005930) has seen tremendous success in recent history, and 2012 has been nothing short of stellar for the consumer electronics vendor so far. The company’s sales hit $42.2 billion in the second quarter this year, topping rival Apple (AAPLby a healthy margin, and its profit of $4.6 billion was up nearly 50% year-over-year. So how does Samsung do it? While companies like Apple use a somewhat narrow focus to their advantage, Samsung takes a different approach: Sell everything.
Samsung has found a niche in attacking every niche it can, Fortune contributor Don Reisinger explains, while the company’s biggest rivals rose to the top much differently. Apple became one of the most successful companies in history by taking control of the end-to-end mobile device experience and building premium smartphones and tablets. Microsoft built platforms for businesses and Google focused on user data.
South Korea-based Samsung used a much different approach. The company’s aim is to attack every inch of consumers’ homes, launching waves of new phones, tablets, televisions, washing machines, cameras, driers, refrigerators, computers and more each year. And somehow, despite the lack of laser-like focus exhibited by the company’s chief rivals, Samsung does it all very well.
“By the end of 2011, Samsung was the world’s top TV maker, earning 22.5% market share,” Reisinger wrote. ”In the display monitor market, it was first with 15.1% share. Samsung also owns some 13.5% of the worldwide refrigerator market. And in washing machines, its market share has grown from 7% in 2009 to 9.2% last year. Even in laptops, where giants like HP (HPQ) and Dell (DELL) dwarf it, Samsung has watched its market share nearly double to 6.3% in just a few years.”

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