Rumors are circulating that RIM will soon shake up its leadership by
appointing a new chairman. The maker of the BlackBerry smartphones has had a rough year, and is quickly losing relevance.
A change at the top may bring some fresh perspective and new vision,
but expecting a new chairman to be a white knight that saves the company
may be asking too much.
The role of chairman at RIM is currently filled by two people. The
co-CEOs, Jim Balsillie and Mike Lazaridis, are also its co-chairmen.
While the saying suggests that “two heads are better than one,” the
chaos at RIM seems to indicate instead that “too many chefs spoil the
soup.”
RIM made the same mistake that other iconic companies have made over
the years. It believed it was too big to fail and didn’t take its rivals
seriously until it was too late. The Apple iPhone and the Android
invasion have decimated RIM's market share in the industry that it
helped put on the map in the first place.
Throughout 2011, RIM careened wildly about with seemingly no vision
or strategy. Companies make mistakes, with course corrections all the
time, but few companies have had the problems that RIM had in 2011 and
survived to talk about it. It is a testament to RIM’s once-dominant role
in the industry that it still exists at all.
Is it too late for RIM? Perhaps. Many might consider it a coup if
the incoming chairman can just successfully negotiate an acquisition
that gives RIM some sort of exit strategy that puts money in shareholder
pockets. It would at least be better than the current business strategy
that seems to revolve around self-annihilation.
RIM has struggled to keep up with the competition -- never mind
actually innovating -- but don’t throw any dirt on the coffin just yet.
It is hard to ignore the fact that many businesses and government
agencies rely on BlackBerry devices for mobile communication, and
they’re not prepared to just abandon their BlackBerry infrastructure and
jump ship to another platform overnight.
The new chairman will have to crack the whip and get the company headed in the right direction again. Define a tablet strategy and deliver, or get out of the tablet business. Map out a solid roadmap for the BlackBerry OS and BlackBerry smartphones, and execute.
The company still has promise,
but reversing its fortunes will be a Herculean task. Suffice it to say,
I don’t envy the position the new chairman will find himself in -- but I
wish him (or her) good luck.
By Tony Bradley, PCWorld
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