Maybe RIM Should Stop Trying

21.10.2011
Research In Motion (RIM) has built a reputation as a secure, reliable, business-oriented mobile platform. Back when RIM was the only game in town, this was good enough--but now snazzy smartphones have appeared on the consumer market, and RIM can't keep up.

Not only has RIM's hardware lagged in the past few years, but its corporate culture hasn't kept pace with the demands of a competitive market. A good example: , in which some customers lost email and messaging services for three days.

While such an outage is embarrassing to any company, RIM's PR just didn't know how to spin the situation. "They handled that all wrong," industry analyst Jeff Kagan tells PCWorld.

"They have the most secure, advanced email delivery system in the world," Kagan says. "But they're not taking advantage of that--they're not telling the world that." Kagan notes that in such situations a company needs a point man that can tout its system's benefits.

Network issues notwithstanding, RIM can't catch up to its competitors in hardware or "coolness." When it introduced its "cool" new tablet in April, it forgot to include messaging and native email, which are, as we know, where RIM's strengths lie. Not surprisingly, the tablet's since by up to $200.

Earlier this week : BBX, which is supposed to combine the best elements of the current BlackBerry OS and QNX (an operating system RIM purchased from Harman International). The presentation was half-baked, as RIM didn't give much detail about the software, nor did it give a timetable for when devices running the OS will reach the market.