Motorola's Zander says Razr problem is history
CEO refuses to disclose what the faulty component was.
By
Sumner Lemon
,
IDG News Service
, 03/15/2006
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Motorola Chairman and CEO Ed Zander Wednesday downplayed the significance of a component problem that caused two U.S. mobile operators
to stop selling its popular Razr handset model for several days
"People want to buy Razrs and they're backlogged in a lot of these stores in the U.S., but we're back," Zander said at a press
briefing in Beijing.
Last week, two U.S. carriers, T-Mobile USA and Cingular Wireless, suspended sales of Razr handsets at the request of Motorola, which had uncovered a problem with one of the components used
in the handset, Zander said. He declined to disclose the component.
The faulty component, which was used in Global Systems for Mobile Communications versions of the Razr, was found to sometimes
disconnect calls, power down and then automatically restart the handset, Motorola said last week.
That problem was quickly resolved by Motorola and the Razr is once again shipping to the two operators, Zander said. "The
impact on the consumer was very minimal because we caught it in time," he said, noting that most of the affected handsets
were found in the operator's inventory.
The problem will not have a material impact on Motorola's results for the current quarter, Zander said, noting his surprise
at the amount of attention that the problem received in the media.
"It got an amazing amount of press, and maybe rightfully so," Zander said. "But it wasn't like, gosh, it was a major problem."
Calling the component issue "unfortunate," Zander credited Motorola and an improved supply chain with quickly realizing that
a problem existed. "Three years ago, we probably wouldn't have known that we had a problem until we'd shipped a zillion of
them six months from now," he said.
The IDG News Service is a Network World affiliate.
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