Samsung focuses on mid-range, amid talk it's making a phone, that's not the Galaxy S10, with four rear cameras.
After weak sales of Galaxy S9 phones put a major dent in its Q2 mobile revenues, Samsung's new plan is to throw cutting-edge features at its mid-range phones first in a bid to win over millennials.
Samsung is switching its usual strategy of delivering the latest and greatest technology to its flagship Galaxy S phones first, before the features trickle down to its mid-range devices.
Samsung mobile CEO DJ Koh told CNBC that, as of this year, Samsung mobile will "bring technology and differentiation starting from the mid-end", starting with its Galaxy A lineup.
Koh added that Samsung is really trying to differentiate its mid-range smartphones to bring "meaningful innovation" to millennials who can't afford its flagship.
The company could also increase the pace of new mid-range releases to more than once per year, with the first of these with cutting-edge features set to arrive later this year.
The move comes amid a slowdown in the smartphone market, with Q2 worldwide shipments marking the third consecutive quarter of declines, according to IDC.
Meanwhile, Samsung reported a 30 percent decline in quarter-over-quarter mobile revenues in Q2 due to unexpectedly low sales of the Galaxy S9.
News of Samsung's mid-range focus comes as noted Samsung leaker Ice Universe tweeted that Samsung is developing a phone with four rear cameras.
The phone would probably be unveiled in 2018. However, it would not be the Galaxy S10 or the long-rumored foldable and mostly unaffordable Galaxy F.
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