Telefonica, one of the world’s largest carriers, has signed a deal with Microsoft to promote far more heavily the software giant’s Windows Phone 8 operating system and devices running it.
The carrier said in a statement on Wednesday that over the next year, it will enhance its marketing efforts for Windows Phone 8 and Windows Phone 8 devices. The company will focus those marketing efforts in several of its major markets, including the U.K., Germany, Spain, and Brazil.
Telefonica said that its move is designed to enhance competition in the marketplace. The company said Wednesday it wants to “encourage the presence of additional mobile operating platforms as an alternative to the current duopoly of Android and iOS, and provide customers with a more personal smartphone experience like Windows Phone offers.”
Related stories
- Bill Gates’s top mistake? Letting Google’s Android rule the world (The 3:59, Ep. 576)
- Windows Phone will continue its slow march to death through 2019
- Best Windows Phone alternatives for people who miss their Microsoft phones
- Windows Phone is dead, but its influence lives on (The 3:59, Ep. 359)
- Goodbye to the tech that died this year
Depending on the research firm, Android and iOS are either extremely dominant in the smartphone market, or just dominant. Last month, research firm Canalys said that Android and iOS combined to secure 78.8 percent of the worldwide smartphone market in the first quarter. That came a few months after research firm IDC said that Android and iOS combined to secure 91 percent of the space in the fourth quarter.
In either case, it’s clear that consumer interest is firmly in Google’s and Apple’s hands. And with that comes leverage. Carriers have historically been loath to lose any leverage, which might be fueling some of Telefonica’s efforts with Microsoft.
So, why Windows Phone 8 and not BlackBerry? According to Jose Maria Alvarez Pallete, Telefonica’s COO, it has everything to do with Microsoft’s “business culture.”
“An associate partner such as Microsoft is chosen as a result of its operator-focused business approach,” Pallete said in a statement. “The Microsoft business culture is based on a model of value creation through its partnersassociates, which fits in perfectly with our culture and also with our way of doing business.”
Although Telefonica will dedicate much of its marketing efforts to Windows Phone 8, the company will not stop selling devices running other operating systems.