Business Day

Samsung leverages Galaxy hardware with software partnershi­ps

- Vlad Savov Tokyo

On a day when Samsung Electronic­s announced four new high-spec smartphone­s, the company also signalled how it intends to compete with Apple’s iOS ecosystem through software partnershi­ps.

The new Galaxy S20 devices will feature deep integratio­n of Netflix, allowing users to search for movies by voice queries to the Bixby digital assistant. Bixby’s morning routines will include Spotify streaming.

Microsoft’s Xbox Game Studios will debut its Forza Street title on Samsung’s Galaxy Store for apps.

“It’s been amazing to see Samsung continuous­ly push the limits of what’s possible,” said Hiroshi Lockheimer, Google’s Android chief.

Google’s operating system has been helped by and risen in parallel to Samsung’s emergence as the world’s most prolific smartphone maker.

Rival Apple is on a mission to develop its own content, such as Apple Music, Apple TV+ and Apple Arcade, a set of in-house subscripti­on services on which the company is spending lavishly to make it a success.

Each of them benefits from its hundreds of millions of iPhones already in users’ hands and they help enhance and strengthen the company’s protected ecosystem.

Samsung has made similar efforts, such as its Samsung Milk music service, and repeatedly failed. Its chronic problem in competing with Apple has been the absence of unique and differenti­ated experience­s. An iPhone owner has access to Netflix and Spotify as well as to the Appleexclu­sive iOS services.

The partnershi­ps announced alongside the flashy new Galaxy phones “will be critical if the company is to elevate itself beyond hardware, diversify revenue and level the playing field with Apple”, said Ben Wood of CCS Insight.

Analysts believe Samsung is on the right track by looking to deepen collaborat­ion with content distributo­rs threatened by Apple’s strategy.

“It hasn’t been proven to work yet, but it’s a much better strategy than Samsung trying to compete in content and enterprise apps itself,” said Avi Greengart, mobile industry analyst at Techsponen­tial.

“The cost and risk of trying to recreate Spotify, Netflix, Office or xCloud is astronomic­al.”

IDC analyst Raquel de Condado Marques likes the synergy between Samsung’s newly upgraded hardware and service partnershi­ps, especially in gaming.

With faster mobile internet speeds and better displays, “Samsung is leveraging what it does best — hardware — and allowing new partners to do the same by relying on Microsoft’s PC installed base and Xbox gaming heritage to provide a more complete platform across different technologi­es.”

Microsoft is developing its xCloud game-streaming service, a rival to Google Stadia, which will let people experience desktop-like graphics and sophistica­tion on their mobile devices.

Netflix has a whole set of criteria as to what makes a Netflix Recommende­d TV, which it uses to incentivis­e electronic­s makers to present its content in the best possible form.

Both companies can benefit from having a role-model mobile hardware platform, such as Samsung’s Galaxy S20 family, to demo their best mobile offerings and to direct other manufactur­ers to emulate.

Not all are convinced by Samsung’s approach to tie-ups. “There was no shortage of big names,” said Wood. “But the partnershi­ps appeared to hold limited potential to build a deep services ecosystem.”

Still, the South Korean tech giant is a powerful draw.

“Samsung — like Apple and Huawei — has its own centre of gravity,” said Greengart, adding that it’s capable of commanding attention through its events and products. That makes it an appealing partner for other big industry names.

 ?? /Reuters ?? New frontier: Samsung head Roh Tae-moon unveils the Galaxy S20 Ultra 5G smartphone in San Francisco on February 11.
/Reuters New frontier: Samsung head Roh Tae-moon unveils the Galaxy S20 Ultra 5G smartphone in San Francisco on February 11.

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