As Samsung dominates the Android market, one has to wonder, who controls whom? Is Google really in charge, or is Samsung so strong it can now rule the Android game?
This morning’s thoughts are harder to focus than usual: I’m sitting across the street from Sciences Po — the Paris Institute of Political Studies — one of France’s elite graduate schools. As hundreds of students gather at the door, smoking (and littering the pavement with very Parisian hauteur), I’m dismayed by the thought that many of these smart, eagerly alive young people will die from lung cancer. Somber thoughts made more acute by the loss of a dear friend two days ago to that very illness — the third smoking-induced death of a close relation in a matter of months. This from a legal drug that’s much more dangerous than some that can land you in jail….
Back to less morbid topics: Like so many other high tech observers, the impending CES (Consumer Electronics Show) in Las Vegas has prompted me to take a guess at what — or who — will turn out to be 2103′s most important development. One name that isn’t on the list: Microsoft.
CES isn’t just an endless series of booths manned by barkers and BS artists where companies peddle their latest vacuum tube audio gear and touch-screen laptops, it’s also the venue for a conference with a series of keynote speeches. During the Golden Age of the PC, Bill Gates was the obligatory headliner on the eve of the trade show. Gates’ keynote was an opportunity for the head of the world’s most important software company to describe (and prescribe) the future according to Microsoft.
When he ceded the CEO title, Gates also passed the keynote baton to Steve Ballmer who continued the propaganda, although with progressively diminishing success. Last year’s keynote was widely trashed by the press (see here, here or here)
“Microsoft CEO crashes and burns in final CES keynote.”
“At CES, Microsoft’s Steve Ballmer Strains For Relevance“
There will be no keynote address from Ballmer or any other Microsoft representative at this year’s CES.
The baton has indeed been passed, but to whom?
The ascendancy will be decided in a fight between Google and Samsung — and that could turn out to be the most important 2013 development.
Samsung is, by far, the biggest promoter and the best advertisement for the Android platform. Not only does the Korean giant dominate the Android market in unit volume — about half if we believe the company’s necessarily imprecise numbers — it also sets the standard for quality with handsets such as the Galaxy S III. And when you consider the huge amount of money Samsung has spent promoting their devices (about $13B — see Horace Dediu’s chart, below, from yet another of illuminating posts, The Cost of Selling Galaxies), you would think that the two companies would be close allies.
But as Samsung dominates ever more of the Android market, one has to wonder: Who controls whom? Is Google really in charge, or is Samsung so strong it can now set the rules in the Android game?
I don’t think Samsung’s competitors fully appreciate the implications of the company’s spare-no-expense investment in securing a dominant market share. In particular, I wonder what Apple execs think of the disproportion between their own relatively tiny marketing expenses and Samsung’s gargantuan budget. Apple has shown, time and again, that they can do more with less, but have they let Samsung secure an inexpugnable market position? Perhaps the Cupertino team was simply unwilling to waste money stimulating a demand they knew they couldn’t satisfy due to iPhone supply chain bottlenecks.
Is Google truly happy with all this free advertisement? Samsung is firing on all cylinders: great Android handsets, apparently limitless manufacturing capacity, imaginative and prolific marketing campaigns. There may be a feeling in Mountain View that the tail is starting to wag the dog, the handset vassal could end up dictating terms to the platform creator. Samsung could parlay its dominant share of Android handsets in a number of ways.
For example: The Android economy doesn’t rely on licensing revenues but on user data that flows back to the Google mothership through the use of Google applications running on platform-compliant handsets. (Such data then flows through Google’s advertising money pump, but we’ll leave that aside for now.) What if Samsung could renegotiate its Android license and demand “role-appropriate” levies for running Google apps on its market-leading handsets? We’ve heard rumors of just such a levy before: Apple is said to receive significant payments for favoring Google’s search engine in iOS devices.
Another possibility is that Samsung could emulate Amazon’s practice of picking the Android lock. By modifying the Open Source Android source code — a completely legal maneuver — Samsung could create its own set of revenue-generating apps and services and thus cut Google out of the income stream. A number of other handset makers, particularly in China, are headed down this path, proposing devices based on Android-derived platforms such as Tapas and OPhone.
Lastly, although less seriously, Samsung has announced handsets based on Tizen, an OS that has joined the chorus line of Open Source platforms: Gram (née WebOS), Jolla (Nokia émigrés), Ubuntu (née Debian), Firefox OS. My apologies for possible oversights…
Samsung can’t possibly believe it can build a viable business on Tizen. It must know that the platform itself no longer matters, that this has become an ecosystem war. Even with Samsung’s resources and determination, betting on Tizen as an alternative to the Android ecosystem isn’t realistic — and can’t possibly impress Google execs. Complicating matters, Samsung also builds handsets on Windows Phone and Bada (developed in house). Such complexity isn’t sustainable.
Over in its corner, Google has Motorola. Ostensibly acquired for its patents, Motorola could be the piece of the puzzle that Google needs to create a fully-integrated device, a “proper” Android handset that Google execs feel their ecosystem deserves and that independent handset makers have failed to deliver. Rumors of an xPhone are in the air, but they don’t say much about what the product will do, exactly, or when it will come out.(Google protests that it won’t give its Motorola team any unfair advantage…a promise that comes from a company that gives special access to partners-of-the-moment such as HTC, Samsung, and LG.)
Of course, creating a device in the numbers that can effectively compete with leading Samsung (and Apple) devices is easier said than done. Google/Motorola will need to convince component suppliers and device manufacturers — who are “controlled” by Samsung and Apple — to free up some space on their assembly lines.
So on one side, we have Samsung, an extremely capable and determined Korean giant with huge technical and financial resources — and little regard for niceties.
On the other, we have Google with its unparalleled infrastructure, full control of the Android ecosystem through its Google apps (think Maps) and services, very strong finances, and real long-term vision. As for niceties, Google’s style may be more “polished” than Samsung’s, but it isn’t a pushover. Google can stand toe-to-toe with anyone.
In the end, ownership of the ecosystem should tip the scales: Google will win the undeclared war with Samsung. The Mountain View company will help itself to the higher value of vertically integrated products and, at best, degrade the Korean giant’s margins or, worse, drive them into a PC-like race-to-the-bottom with other handset makers.
This isn’t an outcome Samsung will take lightly.
PS: Bill Clinton will attend Samsung’s CES keynote…
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23 Comments
I think one of the more interesting questions for this year will be when Samsung forks Andorid into its own OS and effectively dumps Google in much the same way that Amazon has forked Android for its own ends….
I think there’s more to Google building the xPhone than a fear of Samsung. Certain observers like Brian S. Hall have been pointing out for months that Google’s current strategy — monetising Android user data — hasn’t generated much in the way of profits. Android has so far been a massive cost sink for Google. The only companies making money are those that sell devices to users, and Google must be tempted to get in on this action.
“[Google] will help itself to the higher value of vertically integrated products and, at best, degrade the Korean giant’s margins or, worse, drive them into a PC-like race-to-the-bottom with other handset makers.”
I’m not are you are spelling out how this will happen — I think Samsung has the upper hand. When they advertise the Galaxy or the Note they aren’t advertising Android, they are advertising Samsung devices. Apart from a tech savvy minority who is going to care if Samsung forks Android a la Amazon?
Samsung is way, way more profitable than Google right now. They can readily afford to buy/license maps elsewhere (Tom Tom, Nokia, etc.) They can buy license the other pieces of the ecosystem as well. Google Play is hardly some shining success of an ecosystem they can’t live without. And we know what happens when someone gets rid of Google Maps, replacing it with something else: great hue and cry and the iPhone 5 became the bestselling phone ever, the iPad Mini a smash hit…
Plus I don’t see how/why Samsung will allow Google to perform a profit-ectomy on it, to push it into a “PC-like race-to-the-bottom”. They’ll fork first, ask questions later. Ultimately will the carriers be more interested in helping Samsung or Google? That will decide this fight more than anything else. So far I would say Samsung has had far more success dealing with the carriers than Google has.
I’d also add to my comment that Samsung has a far greater latitude than Google to be ruthless — Google is not out of the anti-trust woods yet, while Samsung, thanks to Apple is unlikely to be ever in a monopolist position the way Google is with search.
Samsung knows that they are very strong in the smartphone market. Also, that their Galaxy brand and market trach is strong, and many buy a “Galaxy”, not an Android phone. By using Google’s Android as it is, they are leaving money on the table and they know it.
Replicating Google’s (or Amazon’s) ecosystem won’t be easy, but if there is one company with the resources and with no qualms about ruthlessly copying a competitor, it is Samsung.
If they can try Bada, Tizen, etc. too see what sticks (Samsung tries everything to see what sticks), you bet that they are preparing a fork of Android and a set of replacement online services and app/music stores. It is not a difficult prediction. It is not a matter of if, but of when.
Otherwise, they’d be being dumb. And they are not dumb.
I think China more a problem for Google than Samsung because their services are not used by Chinese manufacturer. If you look at Chinese data Android has 70% market share but the Android Browser is only 30%.
2013: The Year of 4K.
2013: The Year of H265
2013: The Year of Rogue GPU.
2013: The Year of Retina.
The tech media really loves to poke at this idea, because it would be so dramatic and exciting for them if this would happen – isn’t that right?
But in practice, Samsung has no chance if it moved away from Google and Android. Look at all their previous efforts. Look at their Windows Phone efforts. They’ve failed miserably with those. I very much doubt that Samsung is keeping Google hostage or anything like that.
A fork like Amazon will also not work. Samsung doesn’t have the ecosystem, and it doesn’t even have the content Amazon has. Plus, Amazon only got away with it for a little while because of it’s EXTREME prices, which Samsung will NOT do, and because the Android community needed a hero tablet against the iPad. As soon as the Nexus 7 and other such competitors came out – everyone pretty much forgot about the Kindle Fire, which is also an inferior product from top to bottom, compared to Nexus 7.
Sure, they still have some sales going on, thanks to inertia from the media and advertising (also on their own site – antitrust issue, perhaps?), but that is fading away now.
Samsung will use Tizen but not in its stock form; they will put TouchWiz on it and no one will be able to tell whether it’s running Android or Tizen at the back-end. I guess that’s been their strategy behind skinning Android.
According to Ars Technica Ubuntu will come strong next year because it will use native .app instead of Java by Android?
About the store I was not pleased with the Apple one because I have to use it to update the programs coming with the OS and the questions to recover a password are too rigid.
Samsung has successfully built a cult following around the “Galaxy” brand of devices, almost rivaling the Apple iDevices in parts of Asia and Europe. While the Galaxy range of devices are quality devices on their own, Samsung is also buying the “cool factor” through their massive marketing efforts and this seems to be working quite effectively. At some point in time, the man in the street does not really care about the Mobile OS on their latest smartphone, as long as their favourite Apps and Services are available. I can very well see Samsung build a layer of Googlesque Apps and services on top of Tizen on their next generation Galaxy devices. Samsung wants to own their destiny instead of letting Google define it. While Tizen will be open source, I believe Samsung will fork Tizen to make certain features Samsung specific to give them an advantage.
Couldn’t agree more! For Google, Android goes back to mobile search and discovery, whereas for Samsung its about revenues through hardware. Samsung has never demonstrated any recognisable success in creating and maintaining a software stack and culturally they are likely not going to be able to. I think Google wins this one. If they are strategic about it, they’ll prop up Motorola once anti-trust investigations in Europe are settled.
Looking at their relative sizes, Samsung could also buy Google. That would solve all their problems!…
IMO the article left one quite important aspect out : Android made a huge leap forward in terms of platform polish in Jelly Bean and plain, stock version of it is clearly superior to Samsung or HTC “flavors” and it is really appreciated by the users, both Nexus 4, 7 and 10 are getting rave reviews and Nexus 7 has been huge hit in terms of units shipped. If Google can sell enough volume of Nexus 4, which is really amazing phone, they might consider focus more on delivering stock Android to the ordinary user (perhaps in the form of Google Store chain, which is far more important than whatever XPhone). Once people start to recognize the value of untainted Android, Samsung can get enough headache, no matter how they inflate their marketing budget.
Another mistake would be to underestimate the power of the Google Play market place. It is true you can fork Android easily, but you won’t get GP as a result. Even Amazon, which is in great position as its main product is marketplace, has difficulty to provide enough quality applications. GP is a clear winner (along with AppStore) and reason #1 why Microsoft Windows Phone, and any other “new” mobile OS might have too steep hill to climb. If you invested couple hundred dollars into applications for your platform, and you are happy with them, there is no way out.
JLG, I am sorry for your recent losses of friends and relatives to cancer. It is very sad that people do things destructive for their own well-being. I thought these sad thoughts were fitting for the battle that is coming between Google and Samsung. Companies also do things destructive for their own well-being. I liked Google better before they started “smoking.” But I am not sure that Google has “cancer” yet.
To be fair, it’s not the first time we see here a tribune, or a hint, of a future fraction within Android camp.
But face it, as a former Apple CEO and Apple enthousiast, this view looks somewhat self-serving, at least in the best interest of Apple.
However, it has not happened. Not yet. Sure, given enough time, some day, frictions and fractions are bound to appear. One day, or another. But will it matter then ?
Anecdotally it is hard to believe that Samsung outspends Apple marketing phones by orders of magnitude. Here in LA, it appears to be the opposite and besides, Horace is hopelessly Apple biased. But I really love the idea that Apple has kept it’s marketing expenses relatively low because it’s supply chain can’t keep up? The vaunted Tim Cook created supply chain that some have deemed Apple’s core strategic advantage is now the problem?
Anyway, Google clearly created Android, the free OS as a platform to try to stop the iPhone juggernaut (mission largely accomplished). This OS can and will be used by anyone for anything. The other distinct piece, Google’s eco-system has a nice home on Android, the web and even now iOS. It is the critical piece for Google and there is no eco-system close at this point. Apple’s real strategic blunder was continuing to think it was all about shiny objects and going after Android the OS (rubber-banding lists, etc.) and not Google’s eco-system. Samsung, as you rightly point out, is stuck with Google’s eco-system for the time being.
@JLG, I thought pretty hard to discover the logical connection between your recitation of facts and conclusion, but uncharacteristically for your work, couldn’t find it.
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Tizen seems like a good enough OS for much lower-powered phones such as the overwhelming majority of devices sold today — and probably, for the next couple of years. Soon, many in that bracket will want cheap Android phones, but many will not want the pricier components that modern Android will require. It seems like an excellent foray into that space, one which Samsung is otherwise already superbly positioned to serve.
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These users will want apps and ecosystems, too, but one calibrated to a much lower income level, and geographies, than you & I inhabit. Samsung can build out marketplaces based on very low costs and very high volumes.
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And they can do this quite independently of their high-end products and relationship with Google. Tizen might limit sales a bit of low-end Androids, but the immediate threat to Google is zero, as those markets aren’t ones with Google revenues, anyway. Even if —when!— Sammy smushes the line between Tizen and Android phones, and adds stronger apps plus media that plays on either platform, Google will have a hard time coming down on Samsung without blowing up the OHA.
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Samsung would be foolish to overplay its hand, and I don’t think they will. They are carefully investing in being the dominant low-end provider; unless a magical fruit company disrupts featurephones the way that Apple blew away the netbook business with the iPad, Samsung is likely to thrive.
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Maybe the conflict comes in 3–5 years, when Samsung has a robust infrastructure and chooses to see Google as its enemy. Until then, they are getting all the milk without buying the cow, and should be very happy to have Google enhance Android for their near-exclusive benefit.
I see Samsung coming out on top, not Google. Samsung will want full vertical integration, Apple style. It has ridden the Android wave to the top, but once its position and brand recognition as the top handset maker besides Apple is strong enough, I don’t see it staying married to Google—it doesn’t need to in order to retain user share and user loyalty.
If Sammy launches an ecosystem (Tizen or Android fork) that is easy enough for Android devs to port to, they will in droves, simply because Samsung sells so many more phones than all the other Android manufacturers.
The average user likes the SAMSUNG Galaxy S3 or Note2, not the ANDROID Galaxy S3/Note 2. If the UX is the same, users will stick with Samsung even if it’s no longer Android. (I doubt the average Samsung owner even knows the OS comes from Google.)
I think Samsung is in a much stronger position than Google at this point.
http://www.asymco.com/2012/11/14/google-vs-samsung/
If you look at Samsung and Google income Q310 – Q312 it does not look too good for Google. Samsung is making the android money, not Google. Only risk for Samsung is that Google stops doing what it is doing.
Obtaining assets that enable Andtoid and leaving Google behind would be extremely difficult task. It would also be very costly and very risky. Samsung will enjoy the ride as long as it lasts.
Is Samsung even capable of building their own *popular* OS and ecosystem? Apple started building theirs back at the iPod days before iPhone. In terms of all content, movies, books, music, TV shows, not just apps, Apple still has the upper hand in that area. Samsung is so far behind here, they need to partner with another entity, so without the help of Google, Samsung is truly f**ked. Tizen or any of their own OS initiatives aren’t even close competing with what Google or Apple has built. Are they working on some secret ecosystem project right now as we speak or are they focusing on the Android experience for their next gen phone? Considering the money spent on marketing Android based devices, it should be clear. Samsung is not yet capable to leave the house of Google, and why would they want to, everything is free there, well it is.
On the other hand Google needs Samsung and companies like it to strengthen Android’s position in the market place. Again looking at the Samsung marketing budget and market share, they might just be the main reason Android is as popular as it is, hey, its not just about software after all, both are important to a hardware device. Motorola is far, very far behind Samsung today as a brand name. And if you look at the Motorola Xoom tablets vs Google Nexus tablets, it clearly works better for Google when they are open to outside partnerships, maybe the phoneX or some tabletX will change that view, maybe not. In the grand scheme of things, its still better for Google to partner with 3rd parties.
Google v. Samsung, neither party would benefit from the other being an enemy, that’s for sure.
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Axioms:
* Vertically integrated companies innovate.
* What’s not good enough moves to other levels when innovation happens.
* Network benefits and data at critical mass are forces that are hard to recon with.
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Theorum:
In the mobile space, once devices are good enough, value will move to the service layer. Large players with huge network and data at critical mass make it hard to compete.
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PS: It’s not a fort until you have a moat.
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Spoiler: Google and Facebook will reign supreme.
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