X
Tech

RIM makes sweet plans for BlackBerry future

News analysis: What will it jam into the smart phone next?
Written by Gemma Simpson, Contributor

News analysis: What will it jam into the smart phone next?

The word 'Waterloo' conjures up images of Napoleon Bonaparte's last battle, the London station or the ABBA song. But Waterloo, Canada, is also home to RIM's HQ - a company that makes one of the most addictive business gadgets around.

The rather unglamorous nature of the BlackBerry's home might surprise the many business execs who find the devices so hard to put down - so much so, it's been dubbed the CrackBerry by some.

But what Waterloo lacks in looks it makes up in brainpower, housing around 20 RIM buildings and having strong links to the city's university.

RIM recently shipped its 20-millionth BlackBerry smart phone and the devices are ranked number one in the global PDA space - with 18.1 per cent market share in May 2007, according to figures from analyst house Gartner. And now the company is looking at how it can develop its hardware even further.

RIM has been giving its handsets more of a consumer flavour recently - adding a range of colours and more consumer-based offerings. For example, the wi-fi-enabled and camera-clad BlackBerry Pearl 8120 recently arrived in the UK. This device builds on the momentum generated by RIM's initial Pearl model, which launched last year, a device that was slimmer and more consumer-driven than previous BlackBerrys.

Wireless from A to Z

Click on the links below to find out more…

A is for Antivirus
B is for Bluetooth
C is for The Cloud
D is for dotMobi
E is for Email
F is for FMC
G is for GPS
H is for HSDPA
I is for i-mode
J is for Japan Air
K is for Korea
L is for LBS
M is for M2M
N is for NFC
O is for Operating systems
P is for Pubs
Q is for QoS
R is for Roaming
S is for Satellite
T is for TV
U is for UMTS
V is for Virgin
W is for WiMax
X is for XDA
Y is for Yucca
Z is for Zigbee

But don't expect any size-zero BlackBerry designs in the near-future as Carlo Chiarello, director of product management at RIM, explained: "There is a sweet spot when we are using a device and if we make it too thin, it does not feel right [so] we do not want to make the Blackberry artificially thin.

"But we will continue offering other colours [and] there will be improvement on the battery side."

The devices themselves represent a big proportion of RIM's revenue - with the revenue breakdown for the last quarter coming out at roughly 78 per cent for devices, 15 per cent for the service, four per cent for software and three per cent from other revenue.

And while BlackBerry-based software has been seen as being concerned only with emails and internet connectivity, now RIM is harnessing a host of new applications.

Following on from its recent tie-in with Facebook to bring the social networking site to BlackBerrys, Andrew Bocking, director of handheld software at RIM, told silicon.com: "Social networking is an area we see a lot of growth potential in [and] multi-media will continue to grow as the BlackBerry becomes more of a personal device."

The software staff are also working on bringing more navigation and GPS-based tools to the gadgets following the August launch of the BlackBerry Curve 8310 model with built-in GPS. Bocking added: "GPS is one of those technologies we can see a lot of potential with over the next year."

RIM is also planning to move into a more diverse range of countries - having recently brought its BlackBerrys to China after several years of struggling to get the gadgets into the country.

It has now set its sights on bringing BlackBerrys to more developing countries. Dennis Kavelman, COO of RIM, said Latin America will be one of the next big places in the coming 18 to 24 months for the company. But, he added, it's hard to pinpoint one area where the gadget will really take off.

RIM's plans are part of a changing smart phone landscape, with new challengers on the horizon, including a rumoured enterprise version of Apple's iPhone and Google's Android initiative.

But the BlackBerry developer insists it remains focused on the boardroom and is not losing any sleep over potential competitors. First up, it likes the iPhone because it's apparently bringing business to RIM by increasing awareness of smart phones within consumer markets.

As Jim Balsillie, co-CEO of RIM, said: "We saw our [BlackBerry device] sales go up with AT&T after the iPhone came out in the US.

Business users are also consumers so it's a natural step to offering more consumer-flavoured devices. The trick for RIM is to hold onto its enterprise roots and cherry pick the best of the features from the increasing number of consumer smart phones hitting the market in order to keep business users on side and entertained.

Editorial standards