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Gloom falls over Samsung phone unit as it frets over lost bonuses, jobs

TOKYO — The people who make Samsung phones are an elite bunch. They hold the most coveted jobs at the most valuable company within Samsung Group, the largest and most prestigious conglomerate in South Korea.

A general view of Samsung apartment buildings in Seoul. Photo: AFP

A general view of Samsung apartment buildings in Seoul. Photo: AFP

TOKYO — The people who make Samsung phones are an elite bunch. They hold the most coveted jobs at the most valuable company within Samsung Group, the largest and most prestigious conglomerate in South Korea.

But the sense of exceptionalism was smashed last week as Samsung Electronics took the unprecedented step of killing off an entire generation of its Note7 smartphone after persistent problems with battery fires and explosions. Now the 26,600 workers in South Korea who were celebrated for taking the company’s profit and brand to new heights are seen as responsible for the worst crisis in Samsung Electronics’s 47-year history. A sense of gloom has descended, employees say, describing the episode as sad and tragic.

Samsung has said the fiasco will cost more than US$5 billion (S$7 billion), and the phone unit will probably pay a steep price. The division has often received the biggest bonuses within Samsung Group, typically about half of base salary, and employees now suspect they may get nothing. Some senior executives will likely lose their jobs too, including perhaps chief DJ Koh.

“The mobile unit had naturally towered above other business divisions,” said Mr Kim Young-woo, an analyst with SK Securities and former Samsung employee. “Now they’ve created what may be the worst-case scenario for corporate recalls in business school textbooks.”

Samsung declined to comment on salaries, bonuses or potential job losses. “Right now, our focus is ensuring that all remaining Note7 devices are returned to ensure the safety of our valued customers,” the company said in a statement.

Samsung introduced the Note7 in August and recalled the first batch of 2.5 million smartphones in September. The company was forced to call back the phones again this month after replacement devices it said were safe also overheated.

Samsung is navigating the crisis with its leadership in transition. Mr Lee Kun-hee, the family patriarch and chairman, has been in hospital for more than two years after a heart attack. His son, Mr Jay Y Lee, is vice chairman and heir apparent, but hasn’t been able to take his father’s position because of Korean customs. In the meantime, Samsung Group is being led by a management committee, which includes the younger Mr Lee and Co-Vice Chairman GS Choi.

SMARTPHONE UNIT RISING

For years, the mobile-phone unit was just one of several important divisions within Samsung Electronics, along with semiconductors and televisions. That changed with the advent of the smartphone and Samsung’s success in becoming a leader in the burgeoning new field. The mobile-unit accounted for 27 per cent of revenue in 2010, with the proportion surging to 61 per cent in 2013.

That shifted the dynamics within Samsung. Suddenly, phone workers became big, important customers for other divisions, buying huge amounts of chips, glass-panels and other components. Profits soared for everyone.

Attitudes changed too. Phone-unit employees acted like the bosses at times, pushing workers to meet tighter deadlines while having the upper hand in price negotiations. They usually got paid better too and their bonuses were bigger. In 2014, then phone division head JK Shin received a 12.8 billion won (S$15 million) annual bonus, at least 75 per cent more than any other executive director. There was grumbling among other employees the past two years when phone-unit workers got their 50 per cent bonuses even while mobile profits tumbled.

“The mobile division used to be the super boss at Samsung,” said Mr Chang Sea-jin, a professor at the National University of Singapore and author of Sony Vs Samsung, a book on the company’s rise against its Japanese competitor.

Samsung denied the mobile unit wielded power over other business divisions. “Samsung manages its supply chain based on fair and transparent policies and actively supports suppliers to establish mid- and long-term partnerships with them,” the company said in its statement.

REPUTATION DAMAGE

Now, employees are fretting about the fallout from their role in such an expensive hit to Samsung’s once-sterling reputation. Several workers agreed to discuss the current atmosphere and sagging morale, but asked not to be named because they’re not authorised to talk to the press.

“A lot of people are worried about who will be held responsible,” said one employee in the mobile group. “This isn’t something you pull off alone. A lot of people are and have been involved. We all want this to be resolved and put behind us.”

Workers say the debacle has caused soul searching inside the company.

“It’s sad and shameful at the same time,” said another employee in the mobile unit. “Wherever I go now, people ask me things like, ‘Is everything okay? I hear the company is in big trouble.’ It’s a big lesson for us.”

Outside the mobile phone division, employees feel some resentment that the company is taking such a blow because of the actions of a few. They want more rigorous procedures to be implemented to avoid such problems in the future, especially if they are caused by rushing to meet unrealistic deadlines.

One worker with the components division said the mobile unit needs to realise its limits and be extra careful in the future.

“We are strongly committed to determining and addressing the cause and to taking any and all necessary steps to ensure this never happens again,” Samsung said in its statement.

The company’s employees are trying to stay confident about the future. They take comfort from the fact that the Note7 drew positive reviews before the battery problems surfaced. They believe they can emerge from the gloom of the latest crisis.

“If we’re able to nail it with our next phone, we’ll eventually be able to put the Note7 issue behind us,” said one of the phone unit workers. “If we don’t, we won’t get a second chance.” BLOOMBERG

 

 

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