I never had a Blackberry. I never knew much about them, honestly. I knew they were called “crackberry” by the executive-types who couldn’t put them down, back in their pre-Apple heyday. I knew Hillary Clinton wouldn’t give hers up, and that was fodder for scoffing at her. I never knew WHY though, for either of those factoids. Now that I do, I kinda wish that Blackberry won the smartphone wars. They kept cost low, and security high, and they cared about network bandwidth, and battery life. Consumers flocked to the flashier, spendthrift, bright and shiny Apple/Android, and now we accept that sometimes things just don’t work, and that batteries go dead, and everything costs so ridiculously much.
This book tells the story of Blackberry, from the first bright idea of a couple of guys wishing they could communicate more easily and inventing texting/instant messaging. They were brilliant, and they made it work beautifully, and they flew high and proud and made tons of money. And then the market grew, competitors had their own bright ideas, and things really fell apart for Blackberry. (Spoiler?) Anyway, by the end of this book, they have restructured as a much smaller company, and who knows? They could fly high again someday. The author here makes a good case for seeing Blackberry’s fall as a direct result of the cofounder/coCEO’s personal shortcomings in terms of market perception, personality, and communication. Under new leadership, maybe Blackberry can focus on their core business, excel, and market themselves successfully.
From Losing the Signal:
Perhaps the most telling remark was when Lazaridis declared that the three “defining characteristics of the tablet market” would be security, reliability, and multitasking. Lazaridis had it wrong. What Apple was teaching the mobile market was that consumers cared about three different things: style, content, and easy use.
Comic from 10 years ago:
(1987)
Me: Tell me my future.
Psychic: You will have a phone that costs $800.
Me: So, I’m rich?
Psychic: (snorts laughter) No.