National Post

John Chen’s bet on security appears on the mark for BlackBerry.

THOUGH BLACKBERRY’S CEO HASN’T UTTERED THOSE WORDS HE MUST BE THINKING THEM AS HIS BET ON SECURITY LOOKS MORE ON THE MARK, ESPECIALLY WITH FACEBOOK ON THE ROPES OVER THE CAMBRIDGE ANALYTICA SCANDAL. BY EMILY JACKSON IN OTTAWA

- Financial Post ejackson@nationalpo­st.com

BlackBerry Ltd. chief executive John Chen stops short of saying “I told you so” in the aftermath of Facebook

Inc.’ s privacy scandal over its data being harvested for use in the U. S. election, but just barely.

“I told my daughters all the time, ‘ Don’t put all this stuff on your Facebook’,” he said. He complained so much about their picturepos­ting habit that they unfriended him.

“They say, What’s t he harm? Well, when you turn on location there are certain elements of privacy you give up. Maybe it’s not a big deal, but it’s a certain amount of privacy,” Chen said in a widerangin­g interview in Ottawa.

Chen, 62, might sound like a typical paranoid dad worried his three millennial daughters’ vacation pictures could alert thieves to their empty homes. But he’s banking on his belief in the importance of privacy and security. After all, BlackBerry’s future depends on his ability to sell its products as the go- to digital security guard for everything from mobile phones to connected cars.

Many thought the Waterloo, Ont.- based company was a writeoff when Chen grabbed the wheel in November 2013, but he has salvaged its software business even as its hardware business crashed under competitio­n from Apple Inc. and Samsung.

Despite the soft spot employees held for the iconic BlackBerry devices with their beloved keypads, Chen zeroed in on its software services, QNX division and thousands of patents as future growth drivers.

Four years into a job that was supposed to be temporary, Chen’s strategy is starting to gain traction. BlackBerry is a fraction of its former size, down to US$ 932 million in revenue and about 4,000 employees in fiscal 2018 from US$20 billion and 17,000 employees at its peak in 2011.

But BlackBerry’s stock price has doubled since Chen took over. It has landed partnershi­ps for QNX software with major carmakers such as Ford Motor Co. and Jaguar Land Rover Automotive PLC and suppliers like Denso Corp. and Delphi Technologi­es. On the software side, it has partnered with Microsoft Corp. and won clients such as the North Atlantic Treaty Organizati­on ( NATO) and U. S. air force.

Now, Chen needs to speed up revenue growth to prove he turned the right way when he ditched smartphone­s to sell software.

His big bet is on the ability to secure devices, whether it’s a mobile phone, surgical equipment or a self- driving car. He believes “securing end points” will enable BlackBerry to leapfrog ahead of its competitor­s in the Internet of Things age.

“I’ve been wrong, but this feels right,” Chen said.

If he is right, BlackBerry could be his second successful turnaround.

Chen’s first turnaround is what got him the job at BlackBerry in the first place. After management stints at Pyramid Technology Inc. and Siemens Nixdorf Informatio­nssysteme AG, his first shot at being chief executive was at database maker Sybase in 1998.

Berkele y, Calif.- based Sybase was in rough shape back then. In a tale that will sound familiar to BlackBerry investors, Sybase’s stock and reputation had plummeted after a bad product update helped competitor­s get far ahead and stay there.

To fix the mess, Chen slashed payroll and costs, hired a new executive team and focused on niche markets such as mobility at a time when cellphones couldn’t even send email (BlackBerry would introduce that capability the following year).

People laughed at him, he told The New York Times in 2006, and called wireless a money-losing dream. But his rescue mission worked. He stayed at the helm until 2010 when German giant SAP SE acquired Sybase for US$ 5.8 billion, more than six times the value of the company when he took charge 12 years prior.

Chen seems to be applying similar tactics in writing BlackBerry’s redemption story. When it comes to bets on the future, he said he likes to “get to the puck before the puck gets there.”

It’s a charming if slightly clumsy Canadian metaphor for a businessma­n raised in Hong Kong and educated in the United States, where he saw his first hockey game while studying for his elec- trical engineerin­g degree at Brown University. (He got his master’s degree in the same field at the California Institute of Technology.)

BlackBerry investors seem to like what they have seen recently from a series of stock price spikes over the past year. Some analysts predict a return to glory, albeit a muted one compared to the company’s former kingpin status.

Phil Hochmuth, director of enterprise mobility at Internatio­nal Data Corp. Ltd., said Chen, after a painful restructur­ing period, has focused on what BlackBerry does well, such as over-the-air software updates.

“Everyone saw it coming for a long time, but everyone was wondering when BlackBerry would stop making BlackBerry­s,” he said. “Overall, he’s done pretty well in doing the hard part.”

But software is a completely different market than hardware, Hochmuth said, pointing out that BlackBerry’s challenge now is in competing against the likes of IBM and VMware Inc., which have huge portfolios of software to bundle, cross-sell or give away.

Investors also expec t BlackBerry will go on a spending spree given that it is now armed with a stack of cash thanks in part to a $ 1- billion award from Qualcomm Inc. after an arbitrator decided it overpaid for that company’s chips. It also sued Facebook Inc. for allegedly using proprietar­y messaging technology that started with BBM ( BlackBerry Messenger). Chen hopes to settle.

But Chen expects the road to get rockier now that BlackBerry is generating cash, growing its software business and winning customers. After all, it’s not hard to convince people to try a new direction when they know the status quo isn’t working, he said. “Now, it’s different. Now we have something to protect.”

How much risk to take on to chase that better future or exactly what that future looks like then become the primary questions.

Given t he similariti­es between Chen’s tenure at Sybase and BlackBerry thus far — including the departure of most key executives, resulting in a leadership team entirely based in California and Texas — analysts have wondered whether Chen is priming it for a takeover.

He insists that’s not the case, though he said if someone wants to “handsomely reward” his shareholde­rs, “I have to at least consider it.”

For now, Chen plans to stick around as he signed a five- year contract in March likely worth at least US$130 million.

On top of his annual salary and bonus of US$ 1 million and US$ 2 million, respective­ly, he’ll get 10 million restricted share units: half will vest annually, and half will vest if the stock hits targets between US$ 16 and US$ 20. If the stock hits US$30, he’ll get a cash bonus, the exact amount to be revealed in the management informatio­n circular in May.

It’s a tempting package, even for someone who didn’t plan on becoming the face of BlackBerry.

Prem Watsa, chief executive of Fairfax Financial Holdings Ltd., BlackBerry’s largest shareholde­r, had to convince Chen to take the job after in- vesting $ 1 billion in 2013 to save the ailing company.

“We continue to bet on John,” Watsa said in his annual letter to shareholde­rs in March, citing BlackBerry’s reputation for mobile device security, automotive software and patent portfolio.

Even with Watsa’s support, Chen knew it was risky to try to turn around BlackBerry. A wrong move could easily erase his reputation as a businessma­n who can reverse fortunes. “They always remember the last thing you did … if you can’t build it, you shouldn’t destroy it,” he said.

Ye t C hen l i kes going against convention­al wisdom and, as an engineer who used to be tied to his desk to access the internet, he had a soft spot for BlackBerry.

“It’s the first one that’s able to mobilize where you work. This is a big deal. It completely changed how people work, how people communicat­e,” he said. “I really was trying to see whether there was any way to reinvent and save a very big icon … this is not only iconic for Canada, it’s really iconic for the industry.”

Still , C hen originally signed on as executive chairman and interim CEO with plans to set the direction and help with strategy, not actually run the day- to- day operations.

Now that “interim” has clearly been crossed off his title, Chen, who jokes he’s “being shanghaied into this job,” keeps a primary residence in California where his wife lives, although he said he has a place in Waterloo now, too.

He remains a private man, one who would rather not pose for photos, whether they’re for his daughters’ social media accounts or a national newspaper. He’s known to be more compelling in small groups or discussion­s than in front of large audiences.

“Fortunatel­y and unfortunat­ely, I became the face of the company,” he said.

Initially, though, Chen was anxious about the big decisions, most notably the one to abandon BlackBerry’s roots as a smartphone maker. The math showed him BlackBerry couldn’t afford to continue the way it had since it was no longer a market leader, but it was emotional for employees and investors alike to shift from the device that put Waterloo on the map. Chen had to go with his gut.

“After the initial first year, I was never doubtful that this company would survive,” he said.

These days, his role involves travelling around the world to convince powerful customers they need BlackBerry’s software to protect their business, be they government­s or corporatio­ns. A lot of them still think BlackBerry is a cellphone provid- er, Chen said, so he wants to get the comeback story out.

This evolution is something BlackBerry has struggled with since it moved from producing a consumer device that everyone understood and wanted to use — including famous brand evangelist­s Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama and Kim Kardashian — to selling business software with a jargon- heavy sales pitch.

But a sales job isn’t what brings him to Ottawa in midMarch. He’s there to convince the federal government to set national standards for automated vehicles, one of BlackBerry’s major business categories in its post- smartphone phase. His visit comes a few days after a self-driving vehicle owned by Uber Technologi­es Inc. killed a pedestrian in Arizona.

The “unfortunat­e t ragedy” reveals two things, he said: one, the industry needs to step up when it comes to predictabi­lity and safety overrides to avoid test runs turning into mere marketing ploys; and two, Ottawa needs to set regulation­s as soon as possible.

“It’s like drunk driving,” Chen said, pointing to the government’s limit on bloodalcoh­ol content. “The government needs to take a strong role in defining what is the minimum level of security that an autonomous platform needs to demonstrat­e before it’s even allowed to be put on the road.”

Private parties should participat­e in writing the rules, he said, but he’s calling for a minimum national standard to apply to every manufactur­er and component provider.

That’s where QNX comes in. QNX only makes up a fifth of BlackBerry’s business — its enterprise software services pull in more than 40 per cent of overall revenue — but the division is expected to grow after design wins that should, if the puck goes where Chen anticipate­s, generate revenue as cars become more automated over the next five years. He doesn’t want delays in regulation­s to slow the industry down.

“It’s not if I get (revenue); it’s when I get it,” he said.

Meanwhile, the recent Uber and Facebook incidents, along with the U. S. government heightened focus on cybersecur­ity, have thrust safety and security into the spotlight. For Chen, that’s free marketing.

“It’s kind of like when there’s a drought everyone wants water. I provide water,” he said. “The more it is debated, the more awareness it brings, the better off for BlackBerry.”

Chen insists BlackBerry never has and never will monetize the data it transmits and secures, such as emails or a connected car’s activities — it doesn’t even keep copies. That’s not his strategy, merely a continuati­on of the way the company has always operated.

“We suffered through the period when everybody was monetizing people’s data,” he said. “They provide everything to you for free. I can’t provide everything to you for free, because I actually don’t sell the stuff you gave me.”

This particular strategy is a big reason why BlackBerry is popular with banks and government­s, including in the U.S., which has tightened its borders under the Donald Trump administra­tion (Chen played golf with Trump, once, decades ago).

The average person may not understand the cryptograp­hy that Chen said makes BlackBerry’s services secure, but he’s not about to spell it out to anyone for proprietar­y and safety reasons. But he’ll continue to focus on securing end points — after all, that’s where he thinks the puck is going.

 ?? MIKE FAILLE / NATIONAL POST ??
MIKE FAILLE / NATIONAL POST
 ?? DARREN BROWN FOR NATIONAL POST ?? “They always remember the last thing you did ... if you can’t build it, you shouldn’t destroy it,” says John Chen, chief executive officer of BlackBerry.
DARREN BROWN FOR NATIONAL POST “They always remember the last thing you did ... if you can’t build it, you shouldn’t destroy it,” says John Chen, chief executive officer of BlackBerry.
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