IHateMyJob2004
Lifer
- Sep 29, 2004
- 18,656
- 68
- 91
Blackberry is competing in the mainstream market against ZTE, Huawei, and other high-volume low-margin juggernauts, neither of which have to bear the expense of maintaining an entire OS. Apple completely owns the high-end market. Microsoft is desperately trying to penetrate any market that they can, and has a gazillion dollars to throw at their efforts.
Blackberry doesn't have the broad selection of Android, the brand recognition of iPhone, or the deep pockets of MS. I have no idea why you think that Blackberry will be suddenly be successful in India, when they are foundering everywhere else.
Stock's down 10%-ish today. I'm down like $200 by now. Thank goodness I only put $1k in.
Blackberry is competing in the mainstream market against ZTE, Huawei, and other high-volume low-margin juggernauts, neither of which have to bear the expense of maintaining an entire OS. Apple completely owns the high-end market. Microsoft is desperately trying to penetrate any market that they can, and has a gazillion dollars to throw at their efforts.
Blackberry doesn't have the broad selection of Android, the brand recognition of iPhone, or the deep pockets of MS. I have no idea why you think that Blackberry will be suddenly be successful in India, when they are foundering everywhere else.
That was a $3.8 million dollar commercial? This pretty much seals everyone's suspicion that RIM has absolutely no idea how to spend money wisely anymore.
Seriously who buys a phone that takes 10 minute to power on?
I wouldn't go that far. Thorsten has done alot with RIMM in terms of turning a bloated internal system into a very lean one.
Commercials are a crap shoot. They work or they don't. This one was horrible (in my opinion). Not as bad as that homo-erotic soft porn Calvin Klein put out though. IU think it was Calvin Klein anyway.
Seriously who buys a phone that takes 10 minute to power on?
I actually think the new phones are pretty decent, as is the OS (as launch partners we've had one of each in the office for a few weeks for testing). I've also written apps for the platform - so I feel confident in saying that the technology is quite sound.
Their marketing efforts are horrendous. Up and down, every single thing they do in the marketing realm in North America has been awful for years. And if their share of the NA market is what keeps them alive or kills them, they are already dead.
This is the best recent era BlackBerry commercial I've seen. Yeah, it's about a minute-thirty too long, but pared down a little it could have really changed some minds up here. It's unbelievable that they go with gimmicks instead.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=UPbhzmIq9uU
What BlackBerry 10 CAN'T Do? They spent $3.8 million on this crap?
They got an external ad agency to do the ad.
They got an external ad agency to do the ad.
most people using an iphone and android today have at one point owned a blackberry and probably would consider it again all things being equal. It wasn't long ago that BB was the phone to have. The brand recognition in the mobile space is very high. Higher than MS I would guess.
I don't think most people had a BB. Android and iOS gained their users from the rapidly exploding smartphone market.
Over time people become more and more entrenched in their OS of choice, making them less likely to switch.
In my opinion BB has a negative brand recognition to the general smart phone public.