Google Nexus 4 Launch – a Disaster of Catastrophic Proportions

No, that’s not a hyped up title. It’s very much a fact. Google has managed to show some consistency in the way they want to handle their brand new flagship smartphone, the Nexus 4. For a company which, for many, is synonymous with Internet, the whole experience from pre-announcement to launch to relaunch, everything has been extremely amateurish.
Rewind back to 17th October 2012. Google announced that they’re holding an exclusive Android event in New York on 29th October, the very same day as Microsoft’s WP8 Launch. Many, including Microsoft insiders saw this as silly and deliberate. By that time everyone knew nearly everything about what they’re going to announce on 29th Oct. Two weeks later, they had to cancel the event in NY, thanks to Hurricane Sandy. But the announcements did come via a press release.
coming-soon
Forward two weeks to November 13th, the day Google had decided to let Nexus 4 go on sale in several countries across Australia, Europe & America. Google didn’t care to let people know when exactly it’d go on sale, and shockingly enough, they didn’t even send out the email notifications which they had promised to those who had subscribed to be alerted. Once the page went live, customers in Australia, UK and Germany complained about faulty payment systems. The devices were sold out in minutes everywhere, but Google was dumb enough to keep showing “Coming Soon” message.

The hell broke loose when the Nexus 4 page went live in US. Within a span of few minutes, Twitter was abuzz with cries and swearing of people going mad with faulty payment systems and weird errors being thrown everywhere.
  • Many people kept seeing “Coming soon” page even after the order page went live. They had to refresh multiple times to see an option to add the device to their cart.
  • Even after adding the device to cart, many people kept getting weird errors like “oops, an error occurred. Please try again”. How helpful, Google!
nexus-4-cart-error
  • Those who went past this screen, got an error with Google Wallet. And they had to restart all over again only to bump into one of these weird errors. Shockingly, for some people, Google had processed multiple orders out of these multiple tries, even after throwing these errors.
nexus-4-error
So basically, Google managed to insert errors (with no information embedded whatsoever) in every single step of purchasing. Though some people cried foul for the pathetic experience, many others gave Google a benefit of doubt. The obvious reasoning was Google didn’t anticipate this huge demand and hence didn’t prepare well. End of the day, just a few lucky ones (we don’t know how many) ended up ordering a device (or multiple devices) in spite of encountering the errors along the way.

Why Nexus 4 launch is a disaster?

David Ruddock, of AndroidPolice, make some great points in his editorial on this very same subject.
  • Not rescheduling the event after Hurricane Sandy let down many fans. Every new Nexus release is being looked forward to by millions of fans, and completely cancelling the event was just not right.
  • The review units sent across to most reviewers were trapped and incomplete. Unsurprisingly, most of the Nexus 4 reviews ended up questioning the readiness of the device just a few days before the launch.
  • Why didn’t Google put up a pre-order page once they announced the device on October 29th? I mean how difficult it is to learn from near-successful launches carried out by Apple every single time? Having a pre-order page would’ve ensured Google to know the demand and then re-align their supply chain commitments in a much better way.
  • The device itself has had its share of critiques. Glass backing & lack of LTE baffled many. Shockingly, someone found out a way to enable LTE, which works only in few countries due to band limitations. Why did Google hid this info? Nobody knows.
  • The actual ordering page & incomparable purchase experience which came along. People not being able to add the device to their cart, items vanishing from the cart, some not being able to proceed to Google Wallet page, Google Wallet throwing up weird errors, credit cards getting charged multiple times, banks blocking cards for multiple rejections by Google, so on and so forth.
One can understand the issues with handling possibly the second most popular smartphone launch, but being a company which takes pride in its web services, and aims to be a force with payment systems in the near future, Google has simply ended up being a company whose enthusiasm to change the world goes beyond the expertise and preparedness to achieve something much simpler.

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