Why RIM’s Situation Pisses Me Off!

Unless you live in a remote log cabin somewhere and communicate via smoke signals, you’ve been well aware as to how Canada’s own Research in Motion (RIM) has been taking a pounding in the last year or so.  Much of the blame has been directed at RIM’s founders and co-CEO’s Jim Balsillie and Mike Lazaridis, and after months of pressure they both fell on their swords last night and stepped down from their positions.  Early indications are that this move hasn’t seemed to quell discontent much as stock prices for RIM are down on the first day of trading after the announcement.

Without re-hashing many of the explanations as to why RIM has faltered so much of late, I have to tell you that this entire public spectacle of tearing apart a Canadian hi-tech giant has me rather pissed.  What’s really been bugging me is not so much that a Canadian leader is being pummeled, but rather the reasons WHY they seem to be slowly falling by the wayside.

What really bugs me is the fact that consumers, the business and hi-tech media, investors and just about everyone else are dumping on RIM because…well, because they just aren’t making new “Stuff” fast enough.

As an environmentalist the hi-tech race that we see all the time in the world of consumer electronics is something that agitates the crap out of me.  It seems that unless you are a company that can create an entire new product, filled with supposed “must-have” enhancements every six months or so, then you just aren’t a company worth supporting.  RIM and it’s BlackBerry smartphone’s have been building quality and reliable personal communications devices for years now.  They have become a vital business tool for me and so long as the BlackBerry I own keeps me connected, I see no reason to dislike it or want to change it.  However it seems though that in this regard, I’m in the minority.

Thanks to companies like Apple, who apparently feel that they need to build a new version of their much-lauded I-Phone every few months and then market the snot out of it,  things for BlackBerry have not looked so good of late.  Somehow Apple and now others like Samsung, Nokia, etc have made consumers believe that unless you have the newest version of essentially the same damn thing, you are nothing short of a modern techie doufus!  It doesn’t matter that the version you bought only a few  months ago does essentially all the same stuff as the new one, but just a few microseconds slower.  No, what matters now in the eyes of all those who can make or break a hi-tech company is that you just aren’t making newer or prettier versions of the same thing fast enough.

Why should we attack a company because they aren’t spitting out more “stuff” as fast as their competitors?  Why is it suddenly business suicide to not find ways to sucker consumers into believing that they need to be able to flood themselves with the latest  apps that tell you how to find good szechuan food, balance your cheque book and eminate fart noises at the same time?!

When did it get to the point that consumer electronics is all about how fast you can sucker people into believing that the six month old smart phone in your hand is now essentially an out-of-step piece of e-junk?  It annoys me to no end that this frenetic pace which we have come to demand from companies like RIM exerts an environmental and economic toll that nobody seems to care about!

All I know is that RIM produces products that work and keep me in command of my business operations no matter where I am.  I also know that RIM has provided tens of thousands of Canadians with well-paying jobs, yet they somehow now are at risk because consumers want glitzier and more precocious “stuff”.  Our frantic demand for some sort of personal gratification by having the latest and greatest is causing both environmental and economic harm that we’d better start caring about, or else we’ll soon be dealing with consequences that nobody either expected or wanted.

RIM has heard your concerns, and it seems that they will try to make more “Stuff” to keep everyone happy.  In the mean time, just deal with the fact that you can’t organize your dream holiday from the comfort of your commuter train seat, and let’s turn down the frenetic e-hype for just long enough to get a better grip on reality!

Eric Novak

About Eric Novak

Eric Novak is a father of 4 who also thinks that environmental stewardship is a requisite of parenting. He's not a professional Dad nor is he an environmental scientist, but he's someone who gives a damn and is trying to make the right decisions as he lives his life as a father, environmentalist, part time professor and business owner. Eric has 4 children and resides in Ajax, Ontario.