Microsoft: More Than 50,000 Smartphones Have Been “Smoked” by Windows Phone

Just four months after kicking off its “Smoked by Windows Phone” campaign, Microsoft is claiming that more than 50,000 competing smartphones have been defeated by Windows Phone. That’s a 98 percent winning percentage overall. Which makes me wonder: If Windows Phone is so great, why aren’t more customers interested in the handsets?

"I kicked off Smoked by Windows Phone at CES in January [to] show the world that Windows Phone is simply faster at the everyday stuff that people do on their smartphones,” Microsoft’s Ben Rudolph explains in a post to the Windows Phone Blog. “Since then, we’ve seen it in the Microsoft Stores, run by fans, and hosted by Microsoft teams all over the world.”

It’s been a big winner for Microsoft despite the fact that the actual phones aren’t selling well.

According to the company, Windows Phone has defeated 50,675 competing phones (mostly Android devices and iPhones) in the competitions, which have been held in almost 40 countries around the world. Other phones defeated Windows Phone only 638 times.

Evolving the campaign, this week Microsoft is launching a series of "Faster than Windows Phone?" web ads, which can be viewed on the company’s YouTube channel. As with the original series of “Smoked by Windows Phone” competitions, these ads highlight two people, one using Windows Phone and the other using a competing smartphone, to perform common activities such as sending a text message, checking the weather, or posting something to Facebook and Twitter.

Though there’s been some faux controversy over the campaign—in one case, a tech blogger who stacked the decks with his curiously configured Android phone claimed Microsoft denied him a victory—there’s no doubt about why Windows Phone has won so handily in these competitions: It really is more efficient than the Android or iPhone, even when the users of those phones are very familiar with their devices, because of the deep services integration Microsoft built into the system. Some complain that the challenges Microsoft provides play on those strengths. But since it designed Windows Phone to address real-world needs, this complaint, too, reeks of faux indignation. Why is no one complaining that Android and iPhone aren’t designed to address common usage scenarios?

Where Microsoft has really faltered, of course, is with Windows Phone sales. The system currently commands a wobbly 2 percent of the smartphone market, behind not just Android, iPhone, and Research In Motion (RIM) BlackBerry, but also behind the nebulous “Other” category that contains any number of also-rans. And as I note this week in my "Is Time Running Out for Windows Phone?" editorial, Microsoft is quietly remaking the Windows Phone platform yet again with Windows Phone 8, which will be based on Windows 8. This system won’t support upgrades from previous versions of Windows Phone, and it will require developers to learn yet another developer environment and new APIs. In other words, everything is changing. Again.

This kind of turmoil is the last thing Windows Phone needs right now, and while this quarter should show a nice market-share bump thanks to stellar sales of the Nokia Lumia 900, I’m curious to see how these users will react when they discover that their Windows Phone flagship device is just a placeholder. It’s going to be ugly.

“Smoked by Windows Phone” is a great campaign that plays to Windows Phone’s strengths. But if the company is serious about pushing this platform, it should be plastering TV with these ads, pronto.

Discuss this Article 14

walterwood
on May 9, 2012
I strongly considered a Windows phone exactly two years ago but was not willing to wait for Microsoft to get off their butts and come out late with the new model. Instead I purchased my first smartphone, an Evo 4G from Sprint. It seems that now that my current UNLIMITED contract with Sprint is up for renewal I am again waiting for the new model from MS (Win8). I will probably get a Samsung Galaxy Nexus or the new Evo 4g LTE. Also, I am not willing to go with MS's preferred carrier, AT&T. Its no wonder that the Windows Phone is in trouble.
dnotarnicola
on May 9, 2012
I think you nailed the isue by pointing out the impending arrival of the next version of Windows Phone. Techies will wait, as well as anyone who asks their advice. It's the Osborne Executive all over again.
M Wagner
on May 9, 2012
Ah, statistics are wodnerful things, are't they? You make them prove whatever you want them to prove. It doesn't matter how well the Windows phone perforns in a staged test with random participants. It doesn't even matter how many phones Microsoft OEMs deliver to the cellcos. What DOES matter is how many consumers actually sign up for a two-year contract with a Windows phone. The percentage of cellular customers who are actually close to their contract end-date to go out and buy a Windows phone is, MAYBE, 20%. If Windows phone is only courting ATT, that's bad news too. (There wouldn't even BE an Android phone if the iPhone had been availabe on VZW from DAY-ONE!) I agree that Microsoft needs to be promoting Windows Phone like crazy. Especially on TV. The Metro interface ties Windows Phone to Windows 8 and that angle promotes both. The sooner that Windows RT and Windows Phone are tied together, the better.
M Wagner
on May 9, 2012
Ah, statistics are wodnerful things, are't they? You make them prove whatever you want them to prove. It doesn't matter how well the Windows phone perforns in a staged test with random participants. It doesn't even matter how many phones Microsoft OEMs deliver to the cellcos. What DOES matter is how many consumers actually sign up for a two-year contract with a Windows phone. The percentage of cellular customers who are actually close to their contract end-date to go out and buy a Windows phone is, MAYBE, 20%. If Windows phone is only courting ATT, that's bad news too. (There wouldn't even BE an Android phone if the iPhone had been availabe on VZW from DAY-ONE!) I agree that Microsoft needs to be promoting Windows Phone like crazy. Especially on TV. The Metro interface ties Windows Phone to Windows 8 and that angle promotes both. The sooner that Windows RT and Windows Phone are tied together, the better.
M Wagner
on May 9, 2012
Ah, statistics are wodnerful things, are't they? You make them prove whatever you want them to prove. It doesn't matter how well the Windows phone perforns in a staged test with random participants. It doesn't even matter how many phones Microsoft OEMs deliver to the cellcos. What DOES matter is how many consumers actually sign up for a two-year contract with a Windows phone. The percentage of cellular customers who are actually close to their contract end-date to go out and buy a Windows phone is, MAYBE, 20%. If Windows phone is only courting ATT, that's bad news too. (There wouldn't even BE an Android phone if the iPhone had been availabe on VZW from DAY-ONE!) I agree that Microsoft needs to be promoting Windows Phone like crazy. Especially on TV. The Metro interface ties Windows Phone to Windows 8 and that angle promotes both. The sooner that Windows RT and Windows Phone are tied together, the better.
M Wagner
on May 9, 2012
Ah, statistics are wodnerful things, are't they? You make them prove whatever you want them to prove. It doesn't matter how well the Windows phone perforns in a staged test with random participants. It doesn't even matter how many phones Microsoft OEMs deliver to the cellcos. What DOES matter is how many consumers actually sign up for a two-year contract with a Windows phone. The percentage of cellular customers who are actually close to their contract end-date to go out and buy a Windows phone is, MAYBE, 20%. If Windows phone is only courting ATT, that's bad news too. (There wouldn't even BE an Android phone if the iPhone had been availabe on VZW from DAY-ONE!) I agree that Microsoft needs to be promoting Windows Phone like crazy. Especially on TV. The Metro interface ties Windows Phone to Windows 8 and that angle promotes both. The sooner that Windows RT and Windows Phone are tied together, the better.
chuckb84
on May 9, 2012
To some extent, I feel your pain. Mac users went for YEARS with a clearly superior desktop platform and watched Windows take over the world. The technical superiority just didn't matter. At this point the world has gone iPhone and Android. Nothing Microsoft is going to try will change that. Personally, I don't think live tiles vs. grid of icons is an extraordinary advantage, and the marketplace seems to agree. How many phones have been "smoked" by Windows Phone is irrelevant compared with the one contest that matters: Windows Phone has been smoked (I would say Zuned) in the marketplace.
RSun
on May 9, 2012
My response to this "Smoked by Windows Phone" is -- so what. So it takes me 4 seconds to do a task instead of 3 seconds. So what. I'm not going to change phones/platforms for such nonsense. And while Paul may think WP7 is the best platform out there, his belief in it does not make it so. The best platform is the one the user can/wants to use. If it happens to be WP7, fine. If it's something else, fine. To say any platform is better than another is totally subjective and, we all know, beauty is in the eye of the beholder.
hawg16
on May 9, 2012
"To some extent, I feel your pain. Mac users went for YEARS with a clearly superior desktop platform and watched Windows take over the world. The technical superiority just didn't matter." That's your opinion. Having supported both, I found the issues related to OSX a billion times more difficult to deal with than a Windows issue. And that's MY opinion.
hawg16
on May 9, 2012
"The best platform is the one the user can/wants to use." Not to mention the availability of applications to run on it. Hence iDevice superiority in sales for mobile devices and Windows superiority on the desk.
infiniteloop
on May 9, 2012
The problem with Windows Phone is that it's 'All Fur Coat and no Knickers', as they say here in the UK. The tile interface, to some, looks attractive because it's bright and blocky. To others, it's just garish and childish. What really matters though, is the Eco-system. There just isn't much of one. It's a doomed platform that cannot be improved by yet another incompatible underlying OS. Windows 8 in effect, resets the platform to zero, which means it's years late to the mobile party. The fact that Windows 8 on phones, tablets and pc's will not run the same Apps is going to cause further confusion and frustration. The whole thing is an unholy mess.
infiniteloop
on May 9, 2012
@fanboyssuck: Except that you forget that you can, if you feel you must, run Windows on a Mac too, making the Mac the computer which can run the most Apps.
spanougakis
on May 10, 2012
Dear Paul, The problem with WinowsPhone is the same that Hyper-V has: they're introduced to the market too late. They work very very well, but consumers and IT people already bought something else and is not easy to convince them to try the alternatives. It will take time...
chuckb84
on May 11, 2012
"Having supported both, I found the issues related to OSX a billion times more difficult to deal with than a Windows issue. " Examples? I'm actually interested. My experience with OSX is that maintenance is simple almost to the point of irrelevance, -except- when you try to integrate OSX into a corporate Windows/Office/Exchange/Sharepoint environment. That can be a nightmare, but it's not the fault of the OS.

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