Gadget

RIM is dead, long live BlackBerry

Research in Motion has been killed off as a brand, even as BlackBerry is resurrected, in a symbolic burying of the recent, disastrous past, wrItes ARTHUR GOLDSTUCK.

While many predictions about the newly-launched Blackberry 10 devices have proved to be accurate, one announcement has caught the market by surprise

The company formerly known as Research in Motion will, from today, be called simply BlackBerry, to underline the extent to which the company and the brand are one entity with one identity. Previously, the separation of the corporate and phone brand mean that all references to the phone brand had to be couched in intricate terms to denote that RIM was ‚”the company behind the BlackBerry solution‚”.

‚”From today, we’re operating as BlackBerry,‚” says Adele Ebbs, Executive Vice President for Operations and Corporate Strategy. ‚”We’re changing our ticker symbol from RIM to BB at the Toronto stock exchange and to BBRY in New York. It shows the transformation we’ve gone through. It symbolises the new, reinvented RIM, which will be RIM no longer.

‚”We’re recognised as BlackBerry in most of world and this ties our brand together with who we are. It’s an exciting time. We can feel it in the company, when you talk to employees.‚”

Alexandra Zagury, Managing Director for South and Southern Africa, elaborated: ‚”Our focus going forward is on the BlackBerry brand, which is why the naming convention has also changed. Today we are launching the BlackBerry Z10 and Q10. In the ‘old days’, three names would have been associated with the device, RIM, BlackBerry, and, for example Curve, along with a model number.

‚”Now it’s just the brand and a number. It’s a beautiful way of symbolising what we’ve gone through as a company, and this is the laser focus Thorsten has talked about.‚”

The unspoken message behind the new branding is that it puts RIM’s disastrous recent past behind it, and reaffirms the extent to which CEO Thorsten Heins has transformed corporate culture since taking over from the founders and previous joint-CEOs a little more than a year ago.

Michale Lazaridis and Jim Balsillie had built BlackBerry into the largest smartphone brand in the world by 2007, before Apple launched the iPhone, but failed to foresee the impact of the iPhone, of touchscreens and of 3G.

They had also been slow to respond to a global crisis for the company when internationals servers went down in 2011. That incident destroyed confidence in the company, led to the destruction of the share price, and ultimately saw the ousting of the founders as the company’s chief executives.

Dropping the RIM brands marks the final putting to bed of the corporate identity that had been created under the previous management. Coming as it does just a year after Heins took over the company, it also underlines his own commitment to reinvention of the brand.

* Follow Arthur Goldstuck on twitter on @art2gee and Gadget on @GadgetZA

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