BY REUTERS
Toronto, TAG – Research In Motion's Mike
Lazaridis and Jim Balsillie have bowed to investor pressure and officially quit
as co-CEOs Monday, handing the top job to an insider with four years at the
struggling BlackBerry maker.
With
RIM's share price plummeting to eight-year lows, a flurry of speculation that
RIM was up for sale has enveloped the company in recent months. But investors
have pointed to the domineering presence of Lazaridis and Balsillie as one
reason a sale would prove difficult.
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Jim Balsillie (R) and Mike Lazaridis - REUTERS PHOTO |
Thorsten
Heins, a former Siemens AG executive who has risen steadily through RIM's upper
management ranks since joining the Canadian company in late 2007, took over as
CEO on Saturday, RIM said.
The
shift ends the two-decade long partnership of Lazaridis and Balsillie a top a
once-pioneering technology company that now struggles against Apple and Google.
BlackBerry has
suffered hugely at the hands of Apple iPhone and Android, even in the corporate market, is primary stronghold.

Activist
investors have clamored in recent months for a new,
"transformational" leader who could revitalize RIM's product line and
resuscitate its once cutting-edge image. It remains to be seen whether RIM has
found such a leader in Heins.
"It's
the first positive thing that they have done in months," said Charter
Equity analyst Ed Snyder, even as he expressed caution over the choice of
Heins, a longtime lieutenant of Lazaridis and Balsillie. "My feeling is
that it's a figure-head change."
Michael
Urlocker, an analyst with GMP Securities, questioned whether Heins had the
right background for the job that faces him. "I am not sure that an
engineer as new CEO really gets to the central issues faced by RIM," he
said.
Lazaridis
and Balsillie also gave up their shared role as chairman of RIM's board.
Barbara Stymiest, an independent board member who once headed the Toronto Stock
Exchange, will take over in that capacity.
The
pair, who together built Lazaridis' 1985 start-up into a global business with
$20 billion in sales last year, have weathered a storm of criticism in recent
years as Apple's iPhone and the army of devices powered by Google's innovative
Android system eclipsed their email-focused BlackBerry.
"There
comes a time in the growth of every successful company when the founders
recognize the need to pass the baton to new leadership. Jim and I went to the
board and told them that we thought that time was now," Lazaridis said in
a hastily arranged interview at RIM's Waterloo headquarters, flanked by Balsillie
and Heins and with Stymiest joining via telephone.
Both
Lazaridis and Balsillie - two of RIM's three largest shareholders with more
than 5 percent each - will remain board members, with Lazaridis keeping a
particularly active role as vice-chair and head of a newly created innovation
committee.
Lazaridis
said he plans to buy an additional $50 million of RIM shares on the open
market.
In
the group interview announcing the change, Heins said his most immediate
concern is to sell RIM's current lineup of BlackBerry 7 touchscreen devices,
deliver on a promised software upgrade for its PlayBook tablet computer by
February, and rally RIM's troops to launch the next-generation BlackBerry 10
phones later this year.
"Their
problems are deep-rooted, and it's going to take time," Snyder said.
Heins
said RIM, which suffered a damaging outage of much of its network last year,
has embarked on a global search for a chief marketing officer to improve
advertising and other communication with consumers. Consumers now account for
the majority of RIM's sales even though the BlackBerry built its reputation as
a business tool.
For
RIM critics, the focus on customers may seem long overdue. The company seemed
blindsided by Apple's introduction of the iPhone in 2007 and was also slow to
launch a competitor to the iPad. When its PlayBook tablet finally hit the
market last spring, it was not equipped with RIM's trademark email service. The
reviews were scathing, sales were anemic and the company has been forced to
offer steep discounts.
Heins
said it would be wrong of RIM to focus on licensing its software or integrated
email package, a strategy that many analysts and investors have thought the
company might pursue. Even so, the new CEO said the company would certainly be
open to discussions of that nature.
Neither
Lazaridis nor Basillie detailed any future plans outside RIM, with Lazaridis
particularly eager to point out his still-active role as a confidante to the
new CEO.
Both have other interests outside of RIM. Lazaridis
donated hundreds of millions of dollars to set up an independent theoretical
physics institute and also a quantum computing institute attached to his alma
mater, the University of Waterloo. Balsillie heads a think-tank in
international governance and long dreamed of owning a National Hockey League
franchise.[]
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BlackBerry CEO’s Quit
Reviewed by theacehglobe
on
January 23, 2012
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