SHARE
Follow this article on Twitter Facebook LinkedIn Bookmark and Share
Home >> Voice, Data, and IP >> Hardware, Software and Emerging Applications

iPhone faces first test in fickle Japan market

iPhone faces first test in fickle Japan market

By:  Chiara Castaneda  On: 09 Jul 2008 For: IDG News Service (Tokyo Bureau) (hs) Creator

Wireless users there are used to advanced handsets that can manage digital TV and e-money. One analyst says iPhone's lack of features could be costly

TOKYO - In many countries the latest version of the iPhone represents the epitome of high-technology but the picture is different in Japan, which got its first-ever taste of the iPhone last Friday's launch.

Consumers here are used to advanced handsets that handle digital TV, e-money and replace their subway and rail cards for travel, so the reaction the iPhone -- which does none of these -- will get in Japan is being watched with interest.

The original iPhone didn't go on sale here because the country doesn't use the GSM (Global System for Mobile Communications) standard on which it was based. But with the new phone's embrace of the WCDMA (Wideband Code Division Multiple Access) standard, it's been snapped up for sale by Softbank, Japan's number three carrier with about 19 million subscribers.

Buzz was building ahead of the launch. "When the iPhone was announced, I watched Steve Jobs' keynote and thought it looked like a great product and I've wanted one ever since," said Hiroyuki Sano, a student from Nagoya in central Japan.

After travelling for five hours to Tokyo, he set up camp outside the Softbank shop in the trendy Harajuku district at around 6a.m. on Tuesday, three days before the launch. Softbank's announcement that it will begin selling handsets from 7 a.m. on Friday prompted about 20 people as of Wednesday lunchtime to queue outside the shop in the hope of securing an iPhone.

It has long been a challenge for foreign companies to penetrate the discriminating Japanese market, but Apple has proven its mettle with the iPod, which became the top music player in Japan upon its release there in 2006. Japan remains Apple's top international market.

As a loyal Apple user, the arrival of the iPhone 3G sits well with 35-year-old Ryusuke Hiratsuka. "The interface and style are unbeatable, plus I don't have to carry my iPod anymore -- everything is integrated," he said. The biggest deterrent for him isn't the hardware but the hassle of switching carriers and losing discounts he has built up with his current carrier, KDDI. "The amount of money I'd spend monthly for owning an iPhone is equivalent to the phone bill of my wife and I," he said.

At ¥23,040 (US$216) for the 8G-byte version the phone is affordable for most Japanese who are used to paying at least this much for a new cell phone. The price alone can definitely result in sales to about a million units in the first year, Deutsche Bank analyst Kenichi Nishimura recently told Bloomberg TV.

The launch timing works in Softbank's favor as well because it coincides with Japan's summer season, when most Japanese workers receive a bonus equivalent to several weeks' pay. Apart from travel and leisure, electronics is typically a top-choice for how Japanese spend that bonus, according to consumer research company MMRI.

The iPhone, with all its hype, also has its share of detractors.

"I originally wanted to buy the iPhone but I think by using plastic, they sacrificed the design in this model. I'm a bit disappointed about that," said John Hsu, a graduate student.


Sign up for our Newsletters
Tags: Mobile












Print |  Views: 704   |   Rating:offoffoffoffoff  (0 votes)
Rate this article on a scale of
1 to 5 stars,5 being the best.




Chiara Castaneda Chiara Castaneda is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

Related Content

Salesforce.com adds content library, service tools
Salesforce.com adds content library, service toolsThe company makes a rare Canadian visit to discuss key features in its Spring 2009 release, including a repository for materials to win more business. VIDEO: Salesforce.com's chief sales exec
Wii Fit, iPhone 3G among Japan's top impulse buys in 2008
Wii Fit, iPhone 3G among Japan's top impulse buys in 2008Casual poll finds low prices are boon to demand for Nintendo game
Steve Jobs whips up frenzy in Apple's quarterly conference
Steve Jobs whips up frenzy in Apple's quarterly conference Jobs speaks on iPhone outselling BlackBerry and fuels further specultation with coy references to the netbook market
iPhone impersonators and the landscape of Web design
telus and htc launched the htc touch smart phone at a downtown telus retailer this morning. one's coming in for a full r
blog comments powered by Disqus