Something has to change
It's bizarre to think of the world's biggest mobile phone company as being in crisis, but as the true smartphone era develops, and Nokia looks like being left behind, that's precisely how it's starting to look.
A recent report in the WSJ claims the Finnish handset-maker has quietly commenced the search for a new CEO, citing the good-old ‘people familiar with the matter'.
The current CEO - Olli-Pekka Kallasvuo - has been in place since 2006. In the intervening four years, Apple has completely transformed the smartphone market with the iPhone and Google's Android has become the OS of choice for most other smartphone OEMs.
At the same time, RIM has massively increased the appeal of its BlackBerry phones to consumers and the Koreans - Samsung and LG - have been eating away at Nokia's feature-phone market share. Add to that the renewed impetus behind webOS with the HP acquisition of Palm, and Microsoft's surely last throw of the mobile dice with Windows Phone 7, and Nokia's competitive environment has never been so brutal.
For all the efforts made to re-invigorate Symbian - Nokia's low-end smartphone OS - by making it fully open, developer and end-user enthusiasm for it remains low. Meanwhile MeeGo - Nokia's mobile device OS collaboration with Intel - is still in its infancy and certainly has yet to produce a competitive handset.
How much of this is Kallasvuo's fault is debatable. Nokia would have had to put the strategic pieces in place before he was appointed if it was really taking the mobile device market seriously, not four years later. But then again, Kallasvuo cold have changed the course at any time since then.
Nokia's share price has almost halved in the last three months since it issued a profit warning and announced its corporate restructure. Shareholders will be looking for more to be done and replacing the CEO is the obvious option for the board. Nokia's shares were up over three percent in pre-market trading on the NYSE since the WSJ story broke.