Why smartphone pioneer LG got destroyed by the competition

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Wednesday, April 7, 2021

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LG was done in by gimmicky designs, and little reason to stick with the brand

The once-proud smartphone maker LG is killing its phone lineup after years of losses, totaling $750 million in 2020. How did one of the original smartphone pioneers get crushed?

LG was beset by an inability to move beyond provocative designs and focus on creating a collection of worthwhile services and accessories to keep users coming back to the brand.

The electronics giant, which had plans to debut a rollable smartphone this year and unveiled its LG Wing rotating screen phone in September, simply couldn’t match what top-tier devices makers like Apple (AAPL) and Samsung had to offer in terms of functionality and an overarching ecosystem. LG said it is now focusing on "growth areas" including smart homes, robotics, and artificial intelligence.

“Essentially,” IDC analyst Ryan Reith told Yahoo Finance, “[LG] got their lunch eaten by the competition, because they didn't keep up with the changing times.”

LG Wing smartphone is displayed at a telecom shop in Seoul on April 5, 2021. (Photo by Jung Yeon-je / AFP) (Photo by JUNG YEON-JE/AFP via Getty Images)
LG Wing smartphone is displayed at a telecom shop in Seoul on April 5, 2021. (Photo by Jung Yeon-je / AFP) (Photo by JUNG YEON-JE/AFP via Getty Images) · JUNG YEON-JE via Getty Images

It wasn’t just the top dogs that crushed LG, though. In addition to high-end phones that cost upwards of $1,000, LG also offered a host of entry-level and mid-range smartphones that started as low as $140. But it couldn’t compete with the influx of phones from low-priced Chinese competitors like Oppo and Xiaomi that survive off razor-thin margins.

Even Samsung continued to pound the space with its own low-cost phones packed with the company’s name recognition and capabilities including 5G cellular technology.

“LG was really trying to ... grab or maybe hold on to market share on both ends of that spectrum,” said Tuong Nguyen, senior principal analyst at Gartner, referring to the premium and budget markets.

He added: “And I think that is what makes it so difficult for not just them but any vendor in this market to compete, is that you're getting squeezed on both ends.”

LG was once a major smartphone player

LG’s demise has been brutally slow. In its heyday, when it was among the most innovative smartphone makers around, LG’s U.S. market share was a whopping 20%. According to Nguyen, the company was a significant force even as Apple was rolling out its iPhone 4s in 2011. LG still eked out 9% of U.S. smartphone market share in Q4 2020, good enough to make it the third most popular phone maker in the U.S.

Roughly a decade ago, at the height of its glory, LG pushed out impressive devices including its popular G series of phones. In 2012, Google even tapped LG to produce the company’s Nexus 4 smartphone. Google, however, eventually bought out the scraps of HTC when it left the market, and now pumps out its own Pixel line of phone.