Business Day

Apple struggles with India strategy

• Exodus of top sales executives highlights problems in wider Asia

- Agency Staff Bangalore /Bloomberg

Apple has lost a trio of pivotal executives in India in recent weeks as it struggles to boost iPhone sales in the world’s fastest-growing major smartphone market, people familiar with the matter say.

Among the executives who have departed are its national sales and distributi­on chief, the head of its commercial channels and mid-market business, and the head of telecom carrier sales, said the people, who asked not to be identified discussing internal matters.

Apple’s Indian sales team is now undergoing a restructur­ing, one of the people said.

The executive exodus is a symptom of Apple’s persistent malaise in India, where high tariffs inflate the price tags of imported gadgets such as the iPhone and consumers gravitate towards cheaper alternativ­es from the likes of Xiaomi and Samsung Electronic­s.

Instead, the company resorts to marketing iPhones that are a few generation­s old and does not manufactur­e its latest models domestical­ly, thereby incurring import levies.

Its inability to grow the business and single-digit market share stand in stark contrast to the publicly upbeat comments of CEO Tim Cook, who has used phrases such as “very bullish” and “very optimistic” speaking about the Asian country.

Caught up in those challenges is Michel Coulomb, who took over as head of Indian operations in December 2017. While Coulomb has rich experience in carrier-led sales, his team has been slow to cultivate business relationsh­ips in the market, the people said.

Apple also had difficulti­es understand­ing the country, leaving the sales team directionl­ess, they said. The company’s representa­tives in India did not respond to questions.

Apple’s failure to get going in India compounds its troubles elsewhere in Asia — the iPhone X for instance has been a disappoint­ment in China. In India, where it has a market share of about 2%, Apple sold just 3.2million iPhones in 2017, according to Counterpoi­nt Research, In the first half of 2018, fewer than a million devices moved, it estimates. “iPhone India sales were weak in the first half of 2018 and, even if they show a big jump in the traditiona­lly strong second half, Apple will still fall short of last year,” Counterpoi­nt research director Neil Shah said.

Cook has suggested India could be the next China, which is now Apple’s second-largest market. While the iPhone’s price tag puts it out of reach for most, the CEO has predicted that young, aspiring Indians moving up the socioecono­mic ladder would increasing­ly look to upgrade. In May, he said on a conference call with investors that India had set a new first-half sales record.

The world’s most valuable company has stepped up its activity of late, setting up an app accelerato­r and a mapping developmen­t centre, while starting from mid-2017 to assemble some of its older models in the country. But it needs to do more, Shah said.

 ?? /Reuters ?? Looking on bright side: Apple CEO Tim Cook remains upbeat on growth despite the company only selling 3.2-million iPhones in 2017 and recording a weak first half in 2018. High tariffs in India inflate the price tag of iPhones and consumers steer towards...
/Reuters Looking on bright side: Apple CEO Tim Cook remains upbeat on growth despite the company only selling 3.2-million iPhones in 2017 and recording a weak first half in 2018. High tariffs in India inflate the price tag of iPhones and consumers steer towards...

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