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Showing posts with label RIM. Show all posts
Showing posts with label RIM. Show all posts

Microsoft-RIM caveat: Dim results in deals with rivals

Seeing Microsoft chief executive Steve Ballmer take the stage at Research in Motion's Blackberry World conference in Orlando today prompted some wags to wonder if Lucifer was donning a down coat.
A new partnership between once fierce rivals, which calls for Microsoft's Bing Search and Bing Maps to be built into the operating system of future RIM devices, would have seemed unfathomable just a few years ago.
Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer speaking at Mobile World Congress 2011, shortly after announcing a deal with Nokia.

But it's hardly an unusual strategy for Microsoft. For years, the software titan has competed fiercely against companies, only to embrace them when their fortunes sag. The list is long. Microsoft made peace with America Online, a one-time competitor in Internet access that also bought browser rival Netscape. It settled with RealNetworks, with which it once did battle in the emerging digital media business. It famously courted Yahoo, eventually striking a deal in which Yahoo replaced its own search engine on its own site with Microsoft's technology.
And just this year, Nokia agreed to use Microsoft's Windows Phone mobile operating system instead of its own Symbian software.
It's hard, though, to point to a deal that Microsoft signed with a former rival that's worked out well for both companies. These days, AOL's Internet access business is a thing for history books, and the company is working to remake itself as a Web content powerhouse. RealNetworks never became the digital media leader it once aspired to be. That's Apple's mantle these days. And Yahoo's chief executive, Carol Bartz, acknowledged during the company's quarterly earnings call last month that Microsoft's AdCenter technology, the system for buying and delivering online ads that Yahoo agreed to use as part of its deal between the two companies, hasn't generated the amount of revenue it expected.
And it's not clear how much the deals with one-time rivals have helped Microsoft, either. Redmond shelled out eye-popping sums--$750 million to AOL Time Warner, and $761 million to RealNetworks--to settle lawsuits. Did the partnerships launched with those settlements really change marketplace dynamics? AOL agreed to a seven-year royalty-free license of Microsoft's Internet Explorer browser, which has lost share over the years to Mozilla's Firefox and Google's Chrome. Real, in its deal, agreed to support Bing's predecessor, MSN Search, and to promote use of Windows Media on portable devices. Those are businesses dominated today by Google and Apple.
The Yahoo deal has helped increase Microsoft's share of the search business. According to Experian Hitwise, searches powered by Bing topped 30 percent in March. But as Business Insider's Henry Blodget points out, it's coming at a huge cost. Microsoft is shelling out far more for distribution deals, like the newly inked RIM partnership, than it is generating from that business. That's one reason why Microsoft's online services division is hemorrhaging cash, losing $726 million just in the most recent quarter.
RIM, meanwhile, has been losing share in the smartphone market in recent years to both Apple's iOS and Google's Android operating systems. There's no doubt the company hopes the new deal with Microsoft will help staunch those losses. And Microsoft would like nothing more than for Bing to emerge as the leader in mobile search. But the history of these deals doesn't offer either company a lot of hope.
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RIM, Microsoft ally in smartphone wars

Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer took the stage Tuesday morning at Research In Motion's Blackberry World conference in Orlando, Fla. to announce a new partnership between the computing giant and RIM, several reports indicate.
Starting today, Microsoft's Bing search and maps applications will be integrated into BlackBerry phones at the operating system level, said Gartner analyst Michael Gartenberg via his Twitter feed from the event. The search and mapping technology will include location-based services. Microsoft demonstrated the new Bing application running on a BlackBerry Torch 9800.
NPD Group analyst Ross Rubin, who is also attending the show, tweeted that Ballmer mentioned his love for his own Windows Phone platform, but acknowledged that Microsoft has had a strong working relationship and partnership with RIM. Ballmer also said Microsoft plans to "invest uniquely" in BlackBerry services.
But Rubin noted during the demonstration, "Bing on BlackBerry tastes more like Windows Phone 7 than BlackBerry."
Although on the surface it seems to make little sense for Microsoft to work closely with RIM, which is a direct competitor in the smartphone market, it is an indication of how stiff the competition is. RIM, which has been a dominant maker of smartphones, is slipping. Microsoft, meanwhile, is retrenching with a new OS platform called Windows Phone 7.
In February, Microsoft entered into a significant partnership with Nokia, under which handset maker Nokia is adopting the Windows Phone operating system.
The companies face enormous competition from Google with its Android operating system and Apple with its iconic iPhone.
The smartphone category of cell phones is growing as overall handset sales are slipping. During the first quarter of 2011, NPD said that unit sales of smartphones went up 8 percent from the previous quarter, amid a 1 percent drop of total handset sales. This was the first quarter that majority of handsets sold were smartphones, making up 54 percent of total sales.
But it looks like RIM is missing out on the growth, as consumers flock to Google Android and Apple iPhone devices. In the first quarter of 2011, Google's Android OS phones made up half of the phones sold, according to NPD. Meanwhile, RIM's BlackBerry OS continued to slip, dropping to 14 percent of sales during the quarter. In the fourth quarter, RIM sold 19 percent of smartphones.
Apple ate into RIM's sales and to a smaller extent into Android sales, which dipped from 53 percent of sales in the fourth quarter to 50 percent in the first quarter of 2011. Apple's iOS jumped to 28 percent of sales during the quarter, fueled in large part by the iPhone coming to Verizon Wireless.
Microsoft, which announced new Windows Phone devices in the fall of last year, is still a relatively small player. But it's banking on its partnership with Nokia to eventually kick-start sales worldwide.
But what's troubling for RIM and Microsoft is that U.S. consumers don't seem to even have them on their radar. A recent report from research firm Nielsen found that 31 percent of consumers surveyed said they plan to buy an Android-based smartphone in the next year. And another 30 percent say they plan to buy an Apple iPhone. Only 11 percent said they expected to buy a BlackBerry. And only 7 percent said they're planning to buy a Microsoft Windows Phone 7 device.
At this week's BlackBerry World, RIM has taken the wraps off several new handsets and the BlackBerry 7 OS that the company hopes will help it compete with Google and Apple. But analysts have given the new devices and the strategy a lukewarm reception.
Stephen Patel, an analyst with the equities firm Gleacher & Co., said in a research note that "newly announced OS7 products appear mostly evolutionary in our view and we prefer to take a wait and see approach as RIMM faces several tough transition quarters ahead and significant execution risk."
Specifically, Patel said he was impressed with some aspects of the new BlackBerry Bold, such as the thin form factor, faster browsing speed, improved graphics performance, and universal search. But he said he sees the new features as narrowing the gap with competition rather than leapfrogging them.
As for Microsoft, it's clear that the company is looking to compete aggressively in the smartphone market. But it's unclear if these partnerships will be effective in helping the company get back into the smartphone game.
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