Huawei Mate60 sales exceed 30 million, is it difficult to distinguish between real and fake?
Some time ago, a number of ** suddenly reported that Huawei's Mate60 series broke the record in just five months, surpassing the previous best-selling Mate series.
For a while, the whole network exploded, and everyone was saying that products like the mate60 will always be snapped up, creating a new record, if it is not snapped up, will the sales of Apple 15 be crushed?
Therefore, the question is how much to sell to reach a new all-time high. This is a pretty good **.
The best-selling of Huawei's Mate series is the Mate40, which was launched on October 22, 2020, and is powered by the Kirin 9000 processor, Huawei's first 5nm processor.
What's more, none of Huawei's subsequent flagships have 5G, so the Mate40 is hailed"A masterpiece", which eventually sold more than 32 million units.
If the Mate60 wants to be at the top of the list, shouldn't it reach 32 million units?
If you look at the data, Huawei sold about 11 million phones in the fourth quarter of 2023, so much data can't be right.
Huawei's current sales focus is still on the Chinese market, and Huawei says that the Mate60 will only be sold in China, and foreign markets are largely insignificant.
The 11 million phones also include Huawei's Mate and P series, but that's not all, totaling 11 million units.
It's been 5 months since the launch of the Mate60 series in August of this year, and that's not counting the fourth quarter of this year, which ran from January to the end of August.
The best-case scenario is that this month's sales are only half of the fourth quarter, but Huawei's total sales are 16 million units, how much will the Mate60 series be sold? Fifty percent? Eighty percent? One hundred percent?
Even if the Mate60 reaches 100% sales, it will not be close to 32 million, not even half, how can it exceed 32 million?
Actually, bragging is not a shameful thing, after all, anyone can brag, but if you are really arrogant, you can't be led by the nose. But it was clear that he was bragging, and it soon became clear that if his question was true, it was a joke.
Huawei didn't do it, but the other ** did, and in my opinion, this PR is a shame and backfires in terms of consumer reactions.