Motorola Cell Phones No Contract Becoming Hotter Than Ever

After a solid year end quarter, Motorola Cell Phones No Contract plans to keep on staking its claim to the smartphone market by releasing an unprecedented 20 smartphones in 2010. The company did very well last year making No Contract Cell Phones such as the Droid for Verizon Cell Phones and the Cliq for T-Mobile Cell Phones. With the 20 cell phones scheduled to come out this year contains a Google device that will be sold directly to clients vs one sold through the carrier. This has changed into a more favored move recently, take the Google Nexus One as an example and Motorola Cell Phones was quick to leap on board with the idea.

Yes, the mobile device market is bouncing back and many if not all firms expect great things in 2010. But to get profits they will need products and it appears as if Motorola Cell Phones has lots of those. We the consumers might think of 2009 as a “testing the waters ” type of year for Motorola Cell Phones. Well, after a positive reception from the overall public, the company wants to go from “testing the waters ” to taking a market share of the smartphone industry. Put simply, they feel they’re prepared to rule the market. But 20 cell phones in a single year, is this oversaturation, over aspiring, in general a bad idea.

Likely it isn’t. Why do you ask? Well, think of what 20 cell phones can do in a single year. The company can focus a few phones on the business demographic, another couple on multimedia aspects for a young audience, some camera phones, some cross over devices ; fundamentally, a touch of everything. But they will also be in a position to explore new ideas, explicit niches, get a grasp on different technologies, put a toe in the water with leading edge concepts while still turning a good profit with already proven devices. With 20 phones in a single year they can allow a flop or two, but imagine if some of the more experimental concepts don’t flop, instead they are great success stories? Well, then they have done probably as well as they can expect. And I think this is the sense behind the launch of so many devices. So expect that a wide range of phone inside that twenty, not just twenty almost identical devices.

It is now reasonable to say that the market for cell phones is largely simply a smartphone market. There are very few basic handsets left and that is why there is such a scramble to build a name for a company in the changing market. It is now or never. This could well be the year that decides which cell phone makers will be a force in the approaching years and what corporations will target other projects completely. Definitely it feels as though Motorola will stake its claim among the major players of the industry.

Comments are closed.