Why Samsung exploded and how it can turn itself around

Samsung’s Galaxy Note7 was released to rave reviews when it hit the market in August. Unfortunately, the smartphone came with a previously undisclosed feature: the ability to explode into flames without warning.

After the company investigated its flaming phones, it issued a recall and offered replacement devices to its customers, as well as the option to simply get a refund. Then came reports that the company’s replacement Note7s were also catching fire. So, yeah, you could say Samsung is having a rough few months.

In response to the most recent reports of Note7 fires, Samsung completely halted production of its ill-fated smartphone and issued a recall for all Note7s still in consumers’ hands.

With the company effectively killing off the Note7, the discussion now turns to what Samsung can do to limit the damage its exploding phone has done and will do to its smartphone division and brand overall. Unfortunately for Samsung, that may be more difficult than it sounds.

Done in by excess?

The Note7 was supposed to be one of the most impressive smartphones Samsung ever created. It featured a high-tech iris scanner, powerful performance, an impressive camera and an enormous battery with fast-charging technology.

But according to Georgetown University’s assistant professor of operations and information management, John Cui, Samsung may have flown too close to the sun with the Note7 and burned itself in the process.

Cui, an expert in supply chain and global production trends, says the Samsung may have rushed the 5.7-inch Note7 to market to ensure its availability before Apple unveiled its 5.5-inch iPhone 7 Plus.

Samsung really wanted an innovative product in this case — they went from Note 5 directly to Note 7, it has slim battery and curved contours, etc. — and also prioritized speed-to-market to launch the product before iPhone 7 Plus, but overlooked robustness checks,” Cui explained via email.

“There are trade-offs between these three. For a radical, innovative product, it takes time to build and it takes even longer to test it. If Samsung launched [a] more basic version, like Note 6, they would have been fine.”

Killing the Note

Samsung’s original Galaxy Note was one of the first big-screen smartphones to hit the market when it launched in 2011. Since then the handset has grown to become Samsung’s second most important mobile product behind its flagship Galaxy S series. It’s also the Samsung phone designed specifically to go toe-to-toe with Apple’s big-screen iPhone 7 Plus. The Note has traditionally been the phone that Samsung outfits with its newest technologies before bringing them to the Galaxy S series.