By AllTechAdvisor |
Not
every idea turns out to be a good one. Let's take a look back at some of the
blunders in the tech sector from the past year. Some you may remember, while
others were a little more under the radar, but no less ridiculous.
1. LG launched a
smartwatch that wasn't ready
Wearables
are a hot new category with tremendous upside. That's why so many companies are
racing products to market. LG Electronics (NASDAQOTH: LGEAF) attempted to join
that gold rush this year, but CEO Bon-Joon Koo's company made a huge misstep.
The
company introduced the second edition of its $499 Urbane Smart in early
November and pulled it from the market a mere six days later. The device, which
was notable for being the first Android watch that could make calls without
being paired to a smartphone had even been put up for sale by a number of major
retailers and wireless companies.
"Late
in the quality assurance process for the LG Watch Urbane 2nd Edition LTE, our
engineers were made aware of a hardware issue which affects the day-to-day
functionality of the device." LG said in a statement. "After
further investigation, the decision was made to cancel the rollout of the
Urbane 2nd Edition LTE due to the complicated nature of the issue."
Generally,
of course, this type of device-killing problem gets noticed before a product
goes on sale. Letting it actually get to market turns a small problem into a
major embarrassment for Koo's company.
2. Sony's CEO tries to
bring back the Walkman
Nostalgia
has its place, as evidenced by the fact that vinyl records have become a growth
industry. Still, just because something was once popular does not mean that a
new version of it will automatically be a hit. Sometimes, it's not a question
of whether an updated product is introduced, but exactly how it gets brought to
market.
Sony's
picture of the type of hipster who would buy a $1,200 MP3 player Source
Sony
The
original Sony (NYSE: SNE) Walkman was a personal cassette player -- the
precursor after a fashion to the MP3 player. It was not a cheap device, but it
was affordable enough that many high school kids had them and they were, for a
long time, the industry standard.
Bringing
back the legendary Walkman name made sense, but you have to wonder why Sony CEO
Kazuo Hirai signed off on bringing the nearly $1,200 Walkman NW-ZX2 to market.
It's just a really fancy MP3 player, which is a dying category in the first
place.
Yes,
it's marketed at audiophiles, but will the audience be willing to pay three
times what a top-tier iPod costs and six times the entry level model? Probably
not. This blunder may not have the bottom-line impact of some of the others on
the list, but it's a product that's not needed, in a category that is rapidly
going away, built for an audience that generally dislikes digital music in the
first place.
3. Verizon buys AOL
AOL
has been the subject of a number of bad moves, but its acquisition by Verizon (NYSE:
VZ) may be its last. The phone, cable, and Internet giant paid $4.4 billion for
the once-mighty service, ostensibly to advance its advertising and mobile
video.
On
the positive side, Verizon gets TechCrunch and HuffPost, two brands with growth
potential, but not enough to justify the price tag. When the deal went down,
many questioned why Verizon was paying so much for a brand that saw its best
days a long time ago. But, while the Internet erupted in a fit of dial-up and
AOL CD jokes, Verizon CEO Lowell McAdam expressed extreme optimism in the press
release announcing the deal.
"Verizon's
vision is to provide customers with a premium digital experience based on a
global multiscreen network platform," he said. "This acquisition
supports our strategy to provide a cross-screen connection for consumers,
creators and advertisers to deliver that premium customer experience."
He
also called AOL a "digital trailblazer" and cited all the wonderful
ad things the two companies could do together. The problem is that the
advertising platform, which is at the heart of the deal, is part of a
money-losing AOL division. Ultimately, the company is shelling out billions for
a dated name and very little upside.
"Even
if successful, programmatic advertising only would generate about $700 million
of EBITDA in 2017, according to Macquarie, or a 1.5% increase for
Verizon," wrote The Fiscal Times' Robert Cryan at the time the deal was
announced. "That hardly seems a reward worthy of the operational and
distraction risks."
Verizon
does of course also get crates full of old AOL dial-up CDs as well as a couple
million customers who, either because they forgot to cancel or are unaware of
broadband, still pay for dial-up access. McAdam made himself a deal that might
have been a really good one in 1998. In 2015, it's a blunder only because
Verizon isn't getting anything important it could not have built on its own for
well less than $4.4 billion.
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