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Motorola mulling manufacturing in Bangladesh

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Motorola mulling manufacturing in Bangladesh

Bilkis rani

Published at 12:27 am December 10th, 2020
Motorola logo

AFP

After a gap of ten years, last month Motorola made its re-entry to the crowded Bangladeshi handset market

Motorola, the American handset maker that used to rule the roost in the earlier part of the century, plans to set up a manufacturing plant in Bangladesh, as part of its game plan to grab a bigger share of the country’s fast-growing smartphone market.

“We would like to start exploring the options of introducing manufacturing plant of Motorola, which would not only give the brand an edge over the competition but it would also be our contribution towards the economy of Bangladesh,” said Mahamud Hossain, chairman of Salextra, its local distributor.

After a gap of ten years, last month Motorola made its re-entry to the crowded Bangladeshi handset market, where local brand Walton leads. Chinese brands like Vivo, Oppo, Xiaomi, realme and South Korean giant Samsung all doing well for themselves.

So, affordability would be the key to market penetration for Motorola. But that is made difficult by the 57 per cent duty on handset imports. Local assembly or manufacturing, for which the tax is 18 per cent and 13 per cent respectively, would help Motorola's cause.

At present, household brands like Samsung, Vivo, Oppo, with the South Korean electronics giants manufacturing its flagship device the Galaxy Note20 Ultra 5G locally.

If Motorola, which is now owned by Chinese Lenovo, follows through on its plan, it would be the tenth foreign brand to set up a plant in Bangladesh.

Motorola’s re-entry to Bangladesh comes at a time when consumers are fast making the switch to smartphone from feature phone thanks to the global coronavirus pandemic, which has turbocharged digitalisation.

Because of the need for social distancing to keep the lethal pathogen at bay, people are now holding office meetings, taking classes, seeking healthcare advice, doing shopping and banking, paying bills and watching entertainment content from one’s handheld device.

Hossain’s comment came at the launch of Motorola’s moto g9 plus, its third smartphone rollout in a month, buoyed by the tremendous response the handset maker got following its re-entry.

“We are delighted with the success of our recently launched smartphones and are overwhelmed by the love from consumers in Bangladesh for our brand and products,” said Prashanth Mani, managing director of Motorola Mobility for SAARC countries.

The model -- the moto g9 plus -- was launched in Bangladesh ahead of its subcontinental neighbours. The handset will be available exclusively on Daraz and at a discounted price of Tk 25,999 on the e-commerce platform’s upcoming 12.12 sales campaign.

The moto g9 plus is the most advanced of Motorola’s recent launches and comes packed with industry-leading features including 64MP quad camera system, ultra-fast Snapdragon 730G processor, 6GB RAM, massive 5000mAh battery with 30W TurboPower charging and a 6.8” HDR10 display.

 
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Nice, I've always had a soft spot for motorola, Infact, my backup phone is always one of their G series devices.
 
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Walton and Motorola should do a joint venture and come up with a local smartphone by popular demand. Something like the Samsung Galaxy S20 FE :tup:
 
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My dad recounted using a Motorola cellphone installed in the car back in the day way back when (late 80's), then came the TAC model,

220px-DynaTAC8000X.jpg


Then the Micro TAC model came in during the early 90's (all Motorola cells were still made in the US back then and priced as such, because they were built like tanks), using the red fluorescent displays. LCD or even the green fluorescent display was pretty rare back in the late 70's, they came in during the mid-80's.

220px-Motorola_MicroTAC_9800x.jpg


We had analog cell service in Dhaka as early as the late 80s courtesy of CityCell's analog radio cell transmission service. Heady days of early analog cell service. And Akai/Revox/Nakamichi audio, Trinitron Black series TV's. Analog at their very best.
 
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Motorola RAZR is the only folding phone in the US market besides some folding ones from Samsung. Motorola has that niche well covered, at $1400 a pop. This is a big hit on their hands.

motorola-razr-final-14.jpg


p1001095.jpg


p1001248
 
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Motorola RAZR is the only folding phone in the US market besides some folding ones from Samsung. Motorola has that niche well covered, at $1400 a pop. This is a big hit on their hands.

motorola-razr-final-14.jpg


p1001095.jpg


p1001248
They’re that. Either making bleeding edge or budget... they don’t have anything for mass consumers
 
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Mororola.....utter garbage.... but that is a purely personal opinion...

However it is a global company though not a first tier one.... its presence is BD I hope will lift the games of existing players... from what I see the likes of Walton have better offering...motorola is likely targeting the budget segment...
 
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Mororola.....utter garbage.... but that is a purely personal opinion...

However it is a global company though not a first tier one.... its presence is BD I hope will lift the games of existing players... from what I see the likes of Walton have better offering...motorola is likely targeting the budget segment...

Motorola will possibly die in few years unless it makes drastic changes.
 
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They’re that. Either making bleeding edge or budget... they don’t have anything for mass consumers

That is a marketing strategy - they cannot compete in the mass market because of much (much!) stronger competition from the likes of Apple and Samsung. So they don't offer anything. This is called Niche Marketing Strategy.

Motorola as a cellphone brand was sold off to Lenovo China sometime ago, and Lenovo as you guys know also bought HP's laptop brand. Manufacturing is in China but of course to better Chinese product standards.

There is a Brazilian Motorola veteran who runs the US Marketing shop (HQ is in Chicago) which is a Lenovo subsidiary, and he goes by whatever Lenovo China heads tell him to do. Their money, their call.


So Lenovo _may_ open assembling in Bangladesh for cheaper phones - that is my take. Folding phones are too small a market in Bangladesh.

But I may have to eat my own words. They do assemble Samsung's highest priced phone in Bangladesh.

So there. :-)
 
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Motorola will possibly die in few years unless it makes drastic changes.
Actually the original Motorola is dead breaking into two separate units.
Motorola bet the house on Iridium only to lose. They never recovered from that. It was a great company in the 1990s. It did so much innovation but failed to make the transition from pager to cell phone business instead they bet on the super expensive satellite phones. The satellite phones were $3000 which most folks couldn't afford.
 
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Actually the original Motorola is dead breaking into two separate units.
Motorola bet the house on Iridium only to lose. They never recovered from that. It was a great company in the 1990s. It did so much innovation but failed to make the transition from pager to cell phone business instead they bet on the super expensive satellite phones. The satellite phones were $3000 which most folks couldn't afford.

Other than Oil barrons, Sheikhs, drug dealers and international crime kingpins.

In the late 80s, satellite phones were the primary communication method for these people.

Don't know if you watched 'Narcos' on NETFLIX, Pablo Escobar used Sat-phones, as did the other Colombian Cartel kingpins.
 
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Other than Oil barrons, Sheikhs, drug dealers and international crime kingpins.

In the late 80s, satellite phones were the primary communication method for these people.

Don't know if you watched 'Narcos' on NETFLIX, Pablo Escobar used Sat-phones, as did the other Colombian Cartel kingpins.

You need that phone when you are on your multi-million $ Yacht deck somewhere in the middle of Atlantic surrounded by hot babes !
 
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