News & Updates
Nokia links up with Groupon to promote deals on phone maps
The partnership with Groupon, announced on Wednesday, shows Groupon
Now! offers on Nokia maps with a green “G” icon. U.S. users can buy
offers from their phones and get directions to the locations to redeem
the offers using Nokia’s navigation system.
Nokia is not sharing financial details of the partnership with
Groupon. No other such deals have been announced yet, but in the future
Nokia could look for different ways of monetizing its maps, such as
giving phone owners easier ways to make reservations or bookings,
Michael Halbherr, Nokia’s executive vice president of location and
commerce, told Reuters.
Nokia, the Finnish cellphone maker, has been trying to reverse its
decline in the smartphone market by adopting Microsoft software, but has
had little success against rivals Apple and Samsung.
Microsoft announced Windows Phone 8 in June and said phones running the new software would hit the market this autumn.
“The primary intent right now is to make Windows Phone a competitive
ecosystem versus either Android or iOS,” said Halbherr, referring to
Google’s Android operating system and the Apple system used to run its
popular iPhones.
Nokia vaulted into the navigation business in 2008 with its $8.1
billion purchase of Navteq. It claims that nine out of 10 car navigation
systems use its maps. Such systems also compete with free products such
as Google Maps on phones and computers.
Until now, Nokia navigation products have been applications running
on Windows phones. With Windows Phone 8, Nokia’s location platform will
be part of the operating system itself.
Location-based services, such as directions on smartphones, are
critical to Nokia’s overall strategy even if it means that competitors
get to include the services on their phones, CEO Stephen Elop told
reporters in Chicago.
“It is to our benefit to ensure that many different companies use
this, and there will be companies taking advantage of the platform who
may compete with other elements of Nokia,” said Elop. “But that has to
be okay. It has to be, you have to think that way. The competition … is
not with other device manufacturers, it’s with Google.”
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