Originally published Monday, October 26, 2009 at 12:04 AM
Comments (8)
E-mail article
Print view
Share
Brier Dudley
Little-known HTC ready to bring its brand into the limelight
If you haven't yet heard of HTC, you will soon. The Taiwanese mobile-phone company with U.S. headquarters in Bellevue is launching a huge campaign this week.
![]() |
Seattle Times staff columnist
If you haven't yet heard of HTC, you will soon.
The Taiwanese mobile-phone company with U.S. headquarters in Bellevue is launching a huge campaign this week to raise the profile of the HTC brand.
An ad blitz trumpeting a new slogan — "quietly brilliant" — is intended to reach 95 percent of Americans at least 36 times during the holiday season, when you just may be shopping for a new phone.
Simultaneously, the company is planning to double the size of a secretive Seattle "innovation center" led by former Microsoft designers where HTC is creating software to give its phones unique style and features.
It's the crescendo of a three-year effort to reposition HTC from a faceless Asian device manufacturer into a consumer brand that stands in buyers' minds alongside Apple, BlackBerry, Nokia and Motorola.
Already the 12-year-old company has sold $1.6 billion worth of phones in the U.S. — $4.6 billion globally. That includes every model so far running Google's Android software and 80 percent of the Windows Mobile smartphones.
But the company is still relatively unknown among mainstream phone buyers, who are steadily moving toward premium smartphones.
HTC's big momentum in this market is also about to be challenged by new Android phones coming soon from Motorola and others.
Meanwhile, phone companies, motivated by AT&T's success with the iPhone, are encouraging HTC to raise its profile independently and in cooperative ad campaigns.
The carriers "have been asking us to build a consumer-facing brand such that we are driving customers into stores saying 'I want my first HTC, I want my HTC,' " said Steve Seto, director of marketing.
But the company is doing more than advertise to build its identity.
It's also investing in design studios, including an industrial design ship it acquired in San Francisco and a user-interface software lab that it has quietly built up over the past two years in Seattle's Pioneer Square neighborhood.
![]()
The Seattle lab was initiated by Horace Luke, a University of Washington graduate and veteran of Microsoft and Nike who was hired in 2006 to lead HTC's design work.
Luke, who is based in Taiwan, tapped Drew Bamford, a former Microsoft user-experience designer, to lead the Seattle innovation center.
It's not just Microsofties, though. They tapped into the unusually high concentration of wireless talent in Seattle.
Getting to see Bamford is tricky.
You have to find an unmarked door in an old brick building that leads to a dark hallway, where there are no signs of HTC.
Obscure office
When the elevator stops, you pass through a heavy steel gate and walk around a dividing wall before you see anything or the 30 employees.
Then it's a bright, funky space with lots of whiteboards, big monitors and magazinelike displays of various customer types HTC is targeting.
There's also a sound studio where all the various ringtones on HTC phones are developed.
But the tour is fairly limited — the whiteboards are mostly erased, and nobody can discuss what they're developing for the future.
The art is not just in the software but in balancing the competing demands for the phone's on-screen real estate.
Working with T-Mobile USA, HTC's phones are "primarily branded T-Mobile and have kind of a T-Mobile experience or even a Google experience," Bamford explained.
Yet HTC is also working to introduce design features that are consistent across all of its phones, identifying them as HTC devices.
"We have an ambition to maintain both of those businesses but, as a company, the general trend is more toward building an HTC-branded experience," Bamford said.
The new foundation is the "Sense" interface for Android phones that Bamford's team developed and released this summer on the HTC Hero from Sprint.
Easily customized
Its ability to be easily customized is a focus of the "quietly brilliant" campaign.
Seto is another local hire working to raise HTC's profile while navigating the complicated relationships with its various partners.
He was hired a year ago from Starbucks, where he was brand director.
It was his job to make sure people had a consistent Starbucks experience around the globe, whether they bought and drank the coffee directly or through a partner or licensee.
Directly and through collaborative campaigns with carriers, he said, "we're really amping it up."
Brier Dudley: 206-515-5687 or bdudley@seattletimes.com
E-mail article
Print view
Share
Chase shrugs off loss of CD investors
Sunday Buzz: Expedia, Intelius, Classmates slapped by Senate report
Denny Triangle gains skyline, but tenants slow to come
Your Funds: Money for nothing: Some investors pay for advice they never get
Brier Dudley offers a critical look at technology and business issues affecting the Northwest.
bdudley@seattletimes.com | 206-515-5687
LA Galaxy's David Beckham
Los Angeles Galaxy's David Beckham talks about the upcoming MLS Cup final during after a team practice.

Entertainment | Top Video | World | Offbeat Video | Sci-Tech
nwjobs

Post a comment

Michelle Goodman blogs about work/life balance.
How to tell your office you're gravely ill
Post a comment
nwautos

Choosing a new sedan? Weigh the impact of your choice on your wallet and on the planet.
Post a comment
- Italian lead prosecutor argues Knox motive was hatred
- Man shot in chest on E. Union Street in Capitol Hill
- Washington state wines make annual best-of list
- Lynnwood is reinventing itself — again
- Mariners Blog | A Mariners-Tigers swap makes a whole lot of sense for both teams
- Italian prosecutors request life sentence for UW student
- Craigslist adoption ad: A plea by young mother-to-be? A scam?
- Mariners to try Dustin Ackley at second base
- Mariners Blog | Dustin Ackley to move to second base; Mariners add six to 40-man roster
- Genetics anti-bias law takes effect
- Senate vote clears hurdle
194 - First key vote today on Senate health bill
166 - Mariners add six to 40-man roster
140 - Man shot in Capitol Hill
91 - Lynnwood is reinventing itself — again
87 - Italian lead prosecutor argues Knox motive was hatred
73 - Saturday links
50 - Bye week answers, volume four
49 - Prosecutor requests life in prison for Amanda Knox
43 - Historic health care bill nears key Senate vote
37
- Washington state wines make annual best-of list
- Nonprofits get creative using Twitter and Facebook to make donation easier
- Great places to cross-country ski for free (or almost) in the Methow
- Lynnwood is reinventing itself — again
- It's possible to recover a life lost to hoarding
- UW provost tapped for Nike's board
- 175 foster kids in Washington get 'forever families'
- Recipes: Sesame Pork Roast, Sour Cream Mashed Potatoes, Gingerbread with Lemon Sauce and more
- BofA moves to take control of Mastro building in Fremont
- Food-bank donations pour in after theft in Rainier Valley











