Back in Espoo, as the first shipments of the new Nokia 3, 5, and 6 rolled out, Juho felt a sense of quiet pride. They weren't the giants they once were, but they were no longer a ghost story. They were building phones that didn't break, providing updates that didn't lag, and—most importantly—rekindling a brand that had defined a generation.
"It’s a secondary phone," the marketing team argued. "It’s for the weekend. For the festival. For when you want to be reachable but not 'online'." Nokia Mobile: We Were Connecting People (2017)
Their strategy for 2017 was a gamble on . While the Nokia 6 aimed for the modern market, the real star of the show was the "reborn" 3310. When they unveiled it at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, the room didn't just clap—they cheered. It was a bright yellow piece of plastic that did almost nothing compared to an iPhone, yet everyone wanted to touch it. Back in Espoo, as the first shipments of
"We aren't just selling hardware," his colleague, Elena, said, leaning over his shoulder. "We’re selling the feeling of that startup sound." "It’s a secondary phone," the marketing team argued
The year was 2017, and inside the glass-walled headquarters in Espoo, Finland, the air felt different. For years, the halls had been quiet—haunted by the "Burning Platform" memo and the subsequent sale of Nokia’s phone business to Microsoft. But today, the blue logo was back on the wall, and the mission was clear: was ready to reclaim the soul of a legend.
As the sun set over the Baltic Sea, Juho turned on his prototype. The screen lit up, and for the first time in years, the two hands reached out to join on the screen. Nokia was back, and they were, once again, connecting people.