Times Colonist

BlackBerry rebranding to software a challenge

- ALEKSANDRA SAGAN

TORONTO — Blackberry’s shift from smartphone maker to a software company is complete, but branding remains challengin­g for the company with a legacy in hardware design, said one of its top executives.

Chief operating officer Marty Beard said that while the technology firm is “100 per cent complete” in its transforma­tion, changing perception­s about BlackBerry remains an obstacle.

“Biggest challenge?” Beard said in an interview. “You’ve got decades, literally, of a brand associated primarily with smartphone­s — we created that space.”

All that remains of its former empire is some of its newest smartphone devices, including the DTEK50 and DTEK60, which it continues to sell until inventory runs out.

The Waterloo, Ont.-based firm announced in September that it would stop making phones after struggling with profitabil­ity as Apple and others dominated the market, and instead focus on its growing software business.

Beard said BlackBerry’s efforts now centre on what it sees as a significan­t trend, connectivi­ty, and securing all the devices consumers and businesses hook up to their Internet network, like cellphones, tablets and wearables.

One burgeoning market the company looks poised to capture is self-driving vehicles.

Currently, its QNX software — basically, an operating system for a car’s applicatio­ns, such as its acoustics and infotainme­nt system — operates in more than 60 million vehicles. In December, that division opened a research centre for autonomous cars in Ottawa, where developers are working to create secure software.

Security is a huge concern for the industry, said Beard, pointing out the potential for hackers to remotely take control of a selfdrivin­g vehicle.

“Obviously, that’s a life or death situation,” he said. “Security becomes just paramount.”

Beard believes BlackBerry’s reputation for developing secure software positions it as a leader in that space — and the company has had to amp up their marketing efforts to get the word out.

The key is being consistent and clear about the new BlackBerry, he said, though that becomes complicate­d when, like last weekend, a new BlackBerry-branded smartphone is released.

Last Saturday, TCL Communicat­ion Technology Holdings Ltd. revealed the KEYone, a new phone under a partnershi­p with BlackBerry. The deal allows TCT to design, manufactur­e and sell BlackBerry-branded cellphones that use the firm’s software.

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