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    RIM’s CEOs Are Out!

    Provided by Business Insider

    Research In Motions's co-CEOs Jim Balsillie and Mike Lazaridis are stepping down as CEOs, and COO Thorsten Heins will take over.

    In an interview with the Globe and Mail, Heins said of RIM, "It's a fantastic growth story and it's not coming to an end ... What you will see with me is rigour and flawless execution."

    RIM's CEOs certainly deserved to go after squandering the company's sizable marketshare lead. Still, it's surprising. They are the largest shareholders in the company, and Lazaridis founded RIM.

    The co-CEOs had been promising a top down review of the company's operations. Apparently, that resulted in this change. They are not leaving the company entirely. They will be on the board and Balsillie will be a director, and Lazaridis a vice-chairman.

    According to the Globe and Mail, new CEO Heins "helped make the BlackBerry an aspirational brand in high-growth emerging economies."

    The first read on Heins tenure: More of the same. He doesn't say anything about shaking up RIM's plans.

    For people hoping RIM will sell off its handset business and focus on software, Heins has a message: "I'm happy that we're not just a handset manufacturer ... It's this integrated platform."

    And for those thinking RIM should adopt Android, Heins thinks you're nuts. He says all the handset makers using Android are struggling.

    Vice-Chair Lazaridis agrees, telling the Globe And Mail, "That's why we decided to build the future on QNX."

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    11 comments

    • Paul  •  Grand Rapids, Michigan  •  2 months ago
      No president can "manage" the price of gasoline. That's the markets job. What a president should do is create a national energy policy which includes more drilling for oil/gas, 10 year incentives (not two year ones) for wind energy - including loan guarantees for companies willing to build 175Kv electrical lines from the Chicago electrical grid to the Dakotas, approve the pipeline from Canada to TX, and require that coal elec. generators may no longer be grand-fathered in with relation the the clean air provisions from the EPA. Gov't fleets should be run on either nat. gas, bio-diesel, or increase procurement of fuel efficient/ hybrid/ electric vehicles too. And so much more.... * sigh * The DOE should be restructured.
    • Hoyt  •  Jacksonville, Florida  •  4 months ago
      Should have happened months ago
    • bayrat  •  Raleigh, North Carolina  •  4 months ago
      new guy promises "flawless execution" Really?
    • Edward  •  Boston, Massachusetts  •  4 months ago
      this guy speaks like a mortician.. pathetic... he is not a leader
    • Ninja Al  •  Naples, Florida  •  4 months ago
      Tell me if this story is worth anything in 2014.
    • Ninja Al  •  Naples, Florida  •  4 months ago
      Last week I went to Best Buy and grabbed a Blackberry on display. Turned it on and it
      said " Welcome to Windows Phone". Saaayyyy WWWhhhhatttt ! ! ! ! ! ! ...
    • Bryon  •  Cincinnati, Ohio  •  4 months ago
      RIM is done. MSFT soon to follow. Sell now.
    • Gambrinus  •  4 months ago
      do not compare RIM with MSFT, RIM is a pure wireless player, MSFT has not put out a decent mobile OS since 1998...
    • carol_365  •  Markham, Canada  •  4 months ago
      complete #$%$ Those two were fundamental in RIM's success but became victims to a witch hunt by shareholders when things took a bad turn. This looks more like a coup than trying to fix RIM's problems.
      • no avalible 4 months ago
        And why do you think "things took a bad turn?" Because they were terrible CEOs.
    • Gambrinus  •  4 months ago
      And RIM is far from done, this is just the beginning of the new decade. I wonder why would anyone thing WP8 will be great when WP7 is such a slow dog, and tout BB10 as late when in fact it will come out before WP8 and its tablet version PB 2.0 is finally updated and anyone can try out and see how mean and lean it is.
    • VJ  •  College Station, Texas  •  4 months ago
      There is Not a CEO of Any Company in America that wis worth 10% of the Salary the Earn.

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