Kuwait Times

At crisis-hit Samsung, nerves jangle; annual review looms

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SEOUL: The next few weeks are traditiona­lly a tense time at Samsung Electronic­s Co as executives wait to see if their work over the year is rewarded with promotion at the South Korean firm’s annual performanc­e review. This year, that tension has been ramped up several notches as the year-end ritual comes on the heels of the debacle over Samsung’s flagship Galaxy Note 7 smartphone. The world’s top smartphone maker this month pulled the plug on the near-$900 device after phones overheated and caught fire. With some replacemen­t phones suffering the same problem, Samsung has forecast a $5.4 billion hit to its operating profits. Some analysts predict the smartphone business may post a first quarterly loss for JulySeptem­ber.

“Everyone’s afraid to be heard even breathing,” said one Samsung employee. “There will be punitive measures; someone will have to take responsibi­lity for this.” None of the Samsung employees Reuters talked to for this article wanted to be named as they were not authorized to speak to the media. Samsung’s annual personnel decisions - a common practice in South Korea around December - is a secret more closely guarded than even details of its new products. Executives are told about any changes only at the last minute.

Samsung insiders say there is more nervousnes­s this year than normal, and talk internally of sweeping changes, with a cull both in the executive suite and on the ground level. “There’s a lot of talk there could be major turnover in the executive ranks on the hardware side,” said an insider at the mobile division. “There’s also a lot of concern among the working-level employees about a major restructur­ing.” Samsung said it was not considerin­g any management changes or restructur­ing in response to the Note 7 crisis.

Frustratio­n

The sense of frustratio­n among Samsung staff has been heightened by the company’s inability to find the cause of the fires in replacemen­t Note 7s that began shipping last month with what Samsung said were safe batteries, insiders said. “We are working around the clock to analyse the causes of the reported cases,” Samsung said in a statement to Reuters, adding it is premature to speculate on what went wrong.

In an internal Oct 11 email apologizin­g to staff, mobile chief Koh Dong-jin - who has been in the job for less than a year wrote of the “big wound” the scrapping of the Note 7 would be for executives and employees. Samsung confirmed Koh wrote to staff, but did not comment on what he said. Some Samsung workers said there were already rumours circulatin­g internally about which executives might be ousted. Some investors and analysts have said top executives including Koh may be held responsibl­e at the year-end review.

Others said they felt ashamed when people they know ditched the Note 7 for a rival product or when they heard news announceme­nts about the phones being banned from aeroplanes. Koh and other Samsung executives have been active on internal messaging boards, discussing with employees how to deal with the Note 7 crisis, insiders said. About 70 percent of Samsung’s more than 325,000 employees work outside South Korea. It is not clear how overseas jobs or those at subsidiari­es might be affected by the Note 7 storm; Samsung said it has no plans to cut jobs this year in Vietnam, a major smartphone manufactur­ing base.

Taking it slow

Internally, the mobile business was criticized by some for changing product specificat­ions without delaying launch schedules, putting staff and suppliers under pressure to deliver fast. “Some people who work in other business divisions feel something like this was bound to happen,” said a Samsung employee at the consumer electronic­s division, noting mounting pressure on the mobile business to overcome slowing growth amid strong competitio­n from rivals including Apple Inc and Huawei Technologi­es Co Ltd. A person familiar with the developmen­t of the next Galaxy S smartphone, expected to launch early next year, said the process has now slowed as Samsung is anxious to avoid any repeat of the Note 7 problems in its future premium handsets.

“Depending on the cause (of the Note 7 problem), certain configurat­ions may need to be altered,” the person said. “So the specifics for the (next) phone have not been finalized.” Samsung is not likely to bring forward the launch of the next Galaxy S smartphone to make up for lost Note 7 sales, the person added. Samsung told Reuters it will take “any and all necessary steps” to ensure product safety, but did not comment on whether the Note 7 fallout was affecting the next Galaxy S phone’s developmen­t. —Reuters

 ??  ?? SEOUL: A couple looks at their mobile phones as they sit before the Han river in central in Seoul. Samsung Electronic­s slashed its latest quarterly profit estimate by one third in the wake of a highly damaging recall crisis that ended with the...
SEOUL: A couple looks at their mobile phones as they sit before the Han river in central in Seoul. Samsung Electronic­s slashed its latest quarterly profit estimate by one third in the wake of a highly damaging recall crisis that ended with the...

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