How does one sell a new smartphone brand in the world's fastest growing market that already has more than 65 established players? If we go by what has been happening in India in the recent months, cheap marketing gimmicks is the answer you are looking for.。 India is the world’s second largest smartphone market. Over 65 brands compete against each other to grab a share of over 25 million smartphones that are shipped every quarter. Given the market size and future potential, it seems like a lucrative business model to launch a new smartphone brand, selling those phones are a different matter altogether, considering established brands like Samsung, Micromax, Xiaomi and others already sell smartphones priced under $100.。 Thanks for signing up!
。 Naturally, some resort to inventive and creative ways to boost their foothold in the market.
。 Credit: champone 。 The $4 Freedom 251 by Indian company Ringing BellsCredit: Manish Singh / Mashable India。 Now a new entrant in the market, ChampOne, is claiming it will sell its C1 Android smartphone for as low as Rs 501 ($7). The ChampOne C1 seems like a decent mid-range smartphone on paper. It sports a 5-inch HD display, a fingerprint scanner, 2GB of RAM, 8-megapixel rear camera, and is powered by a 1.3Ghz MediaTek MT6735 SoC.。
On its website, ChampOne says that its phone will be available to customers participating in the flash sale on September 2 for Rs 501. Afterwards, it will retail at Rs 7,999 ($120). To participate in the flash sale, you are first required to register on the company’s website. Except you can’t because the company’s website is conveniently facing “technical glitches” for quite some time now. Considering the media spotlight around the $7 smartphone, the company's marketing has been done, irrespective of whether it sells the smartphone for $7 or not.This is not the first time a smartphone manufacturer has tried to capture everyone’s attention in the market by promising unreal pricing only to falter later.An unknown company from Northern India called Ringing Bells had unveiled its Freedom 251 smartphone in February. The company promised to launch the smartphone at a retail price of Rs 251 ($3.5) and said it aims at getting the phone to every Indian. Except that it didn’t. Not only was it caught branding an Adcom phone as its own, the company’s other claims of its phone being compliant with Indian government’s Make in India and Digital India programs didn’t hold much water either.。