MUMBAI: Indian phone maker Ringing Bells launched a 251-rupee smartphone on Thursday, with huge customer demand promptly crashing the little-known company’s website hours after the phone went on sale.
The Freedom 251 was unveiled a day ahead of the launch and is being sold for 251 rupees – a price that sceptics said was far lower than what its components would cost.
The smartphone went on sale in the morning but the company later stopped accepting orders after its website crashed. “We humbly submit that we are therefore taking a pause,” it said in an apology to customers.
Ringing Bells, based in Noida, was set up only last year and the launch event for the new phone on Wednesday night was attended by a senior leader from PM Narendra Modi’s party.
Company president Ashok Kumar Chadha said the Android smartphone would have pre-installed apps that tie into Modi initiatives such as ‘Make in India’ and ‘Clean India’.
“Let us see what can we do to bring about a real liberation of Freedom to all our brothers and sisters,” he said in a speech, referring to the name of the new phone to make a play on words.
In its notice to customers the company said it was receiving 600,000 hits per second on its website, although it did not say how many of those hits converted to real orders.
For comparison, Google processes an estimated 40,000 search requests per second.
India is asia’s fastest growing smartphone market with 103.6 million smartphones sold in 2015. Most Indians still buy cheap smartphones that cost less than $200.
Although the company didn’t discuss the economics behind the operation, analysts questioned the business model.