Samsung Galaxy S9: Samsung Set Sales Target

Samsung Galaxy S9 has set the sales target by the Samsung company, the Koreans wanting to surpass the previous series, but the figure is surprising.

Samsung Galaxy S9 Objective Sales

Samsung Galaxy S9 it has a launch with lower sales than the Samsung Galaxy S8 series, according to some partners of the Korean company, but despite this, it seems that a sales target has already been established. Samsung intends to sell 43 million units of the Samsung Galaxy S9 in 2018, with only 2 million units more than seriously before, the Koreans taking into account the "production difficulties" of the phone.

The Samsung Galaxy S9 is presented by the Korean partners as having sales 30% lower than those of the Samsung Galaxy S8, so setting a sales goal higher than the one recorded for the previous series is something bold. Of course, Samsung can say anything now, and the Samsung Galaxy S9 may have a different evolution on the market, but even so, the total sales figure for this series is small compared to what Apple sells.

Samsung Galaxy S9: Samsung set sales target

Samsung Galaxy S9 would record sales of 43 million units in 8 and a half months of availability, while iPhone X it would have sold 25 million units in just a month and a half. By the fall, iPhone X could reach sales of 60-70 million units, much more than the Samsung Galaxy S9, although its selling price is much higher than the one charged by Koreans for their phone.

"Samsung aims to ship 43 million units of the S9 and S9 Plus although it can revise the sales goal depending on market conditions. The yield rate of the new flagship phones were taken into consideration. Samsung has requested its local suppliers to set the production schedule of smartphone parts based on its target."

The Samsung Galaxy S9 is a good smartphone, but its problem is that the differences compared to the Samsung Galaxy S8 are very small, so people prefer to stay with the previous series, or continue to buy models from it. Samsung tried to adopt a strategy similar to that of Apple, which launches phones from the S series, but the Samsung Galaxy S9 is not an iPhone, so it seems to have problems with sales.