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Nokia CEO Wonders Whatever Happened to Nokia

By Uri Friedman   |   Feb 9, 2011

In an internal memo obtained by Engadget, Nokia's new CEO, Stephen Elop, bluntly informed his employees that they were "standing on a 'burning platform'" that they themselves had doused with gasoline, with competitors like Apple and Google transforming the mobile market and leaving the Finnish cellphone maker in the dust. He noted the iPhone's user experience is superior to anything Nokia offers, Android has managed to surpass Nokia in smartphone volume in only two years, and Chinese manufacturers are pumping out devices faster than Nokia employees can polish PowerPoint presentations.

The communication comes ahead of a Nokia analyst briefing on Friday in London in which Elop, formerly of Microsoft, is expected to shake up the company's strategy and leadership team and possibly announce a partnership with Microsoft or Google to use their mobile operating systems.

Elop's "burning platform" metaphor (he actually likened Nokia to a man leaping off a blazing oil platform into the icy waters of the North Sea) is not new; in the business world, it refers to a situation in which a company must take a risk because cleaving to the status quo is suicidal. But what is novel is a CEO doling out such tough medicine to his staff. Will the memo inspire the troops or incite a revolt? So far, the management experts and fellow CEOs we've seen weighing in on the story are siding with Elop:

Have you come across any leadership experts denouncing Elop's strategy? If so, send their comments our way.

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