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Blackberry maker RIM says co-chief executives step down Blackberry maker RIM says co-chief executives step down
(40 minutes later)
Blackberry maker Research In Motion (RIM) has said its co-chief executives Mike Lazaridis and Jim Balsillie have stepped down in a shake-up.Blackberry maker Research In Motion (RIM) has said its co-chief executives Mike Lazaridis and Jim Balsillie have stepped down in a shake-up.
Mr Lazaridis, who founded RIM in 1984, will become vice chairman. Mr Balsillie will continue to sit on the board but not have any operational role.Mr Lazaridis, who founded RIM in 1984, will become vice chairman. Mr Balsillie will continue to sit on the board but not have any operational role.
Chief operating officer Thorsten Heins will replace them starting Monday.Chief operating officer Thorsten Heins will replace them starting Monday.
Investors have called for a strategy change as the company struggles to compete with Apple and Google.Investors have called for a strategy change as the company struggles to compete with Apple and Google.
Management shuffle
The departure of RIM's co-chief executives was long overdue. Not even troubled computer giant Hewlett-Packard - which lost two CEOs in less than a year - was as bad a technology car crash as Research In Motion.
Here was a company that defined what smartphones were all about; that had cornered the oh-so-important corporate market; that had made serious inroads into the youth market with cheap entry-level smartphones. And then threw it all away in an orgy of poor executive decisions, lacklustre innovation, unkept promises in delivering new product and - the greatest sin of all - a total lack of understanding that its part of the tech industry was undergoing a fundamental shift.
First Apple, then Google managed to eat the Blackberry pie, and RIM did nothing to stop them. The company's new boss will have to work very hard to keep RIM in the smartphone game.
Mr Lazaridis, speaking after the announcement, said he recognized things needed to change at the company.Mr Lazaridis, speaking after the announcement, said he recognized things needed to change at the company.
"There comes a time in the growth of every successful company when the founders recognize the need to pass the baton to new leadership," he said at a press conference at RIM's headquarters in Waterloo, Canada."There comes a time in the growth of every successful company when the founders recognize the need to pass the baton to new leadership," he said at a press conference at RIM's headquarters in Waterloo, Canada.
"Jim and I went to the board and told them that we thought that time was now.""Jim and I went to the board and told them that we thought that time was now."
RIM's stock tumbled 75% last year as sales dropped. Mr Heins started at RIM in 2007, having previously worked at Siemens Communications. He became the chief operating officer in August 2011, href="http://press.rim.com/release.jsp?id=5358" >according to the company.
The BBC News website's business editor Tim Weber said RIM's decline was due to a number of issues, not least a lack of innovation. Mr Heins said: "As with any company that has grown as fast as we have, there have been inevitable growing pains".
"Here was a company that defined what smartphones were all about; that had cornered the oh-so-important corporate market; that had made serious inroads into the youth market with cheap entry-level smartphones," he explained. "We have learned from those challenges and, I believe, we have and will become a stronger company as a result."
"And then threw it all away in an orgy of poor executive decisions, lacklustre innovation, unkept promises in delivering new product and - the greatest sin of all - a total lack of understanding that its part of the tech industry was undergoing a fundamental shift." Barbara Stymiest, who has been on the board of RIM since 2007, has been made the new chairman, a post that Mr Balsillie and Mr Lazaridis also shared.
Sharp decline
Blackberry, which was once extremely popular with users has suffered major setbacks in recent months.
It had its worst service outage in 2011 and has been losing market share to its competitors in the smartphone markets.
Billions of dollars have been wiped from its market value as shares have tumbled 75% and sales have dropped.
One of its latest offering the PlayBook tablet, a reply to Apple's iPad, has not proven as popular as the company had hoped.