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BlackBerry 10 Interview Goes Bad as iPhone question is ignored

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http://www.digitaltrends.com/mobile...rview-goes-bad-as-iphone-question-is-ignored/

When you’re Research in Motion, and have effectively been squeezed out of the smartphone market by Apple and Google, the question of what the company has learned from its primary competitors is going to come up in interviews. It would be wise, then, to have an answer prepared; after all, a lot of potential customers are going to be comparing your new products against the iPhone and many Android phones after today, so a few hints at where BlackBerry 10 differs wouldn’t go amiss.

Sadly, in an interview with BBC Radio 5 Live, RIM Europe’s Managing Director, Stephen Bates either didn’t have an answer in his pocket or more worryingly, has accidentally admitted RIM has learned absolutely nothing from its competitors. Bates was being interviewed about BlackBerry 10, which launches later today, by well-known British radio host Nicky Campbell who posed the question, “What have you learned from Apple?”

Pretty straight forward question, right? Not for Bates, who stumbled for a second before replying, “So, BlackBerry 10 is a unique proposition…” After not receiving any form of answer, Campbell pushed again, asking, “Have you learned anything from the iPhone?” The response? “This market is a great market…” Blah, blah, press release copy, blah. The interview continues for another two-and-a-half minutes, where Bates continues to not answer the question, or indeed say anything about BlackBerry 10’s benefits, unique selling points or how it differentiates itself from the competition.
Embarrassing, and a missed opportunity

You can listen to the whole, embarrassing three minutes here, and it’s both highly amusing and terribly worrying at the same time. We’d be surprised if anyone listening and hearing about BlackBerry 10 for the first time will be inspired to seek out details later on, or try to find a new BlackBerry phone in the shops. The impression the interview gives is that BlackBerry is the same business focused, dreary option it has been for the last few years. Worse still, BlackBerry 10 sounded boring, and RIM clueless about what real people want from a smartphone.

No companies, especially ones in the midst of a make-or-break relaunch, can afford to ignore the competition – or at least, give the impression of doing so. Apple slings lawsuits at its enemies to undermine their products, Samsung makes TV adverts which poke fun at the iPhone and Apple’s clientele, and Google fills its competitors phones with its own, super-popular apps. We’d be surprised if RIM hadn’t been studying the iPhone, iOS, Android and the Galaxy S3 to see what makes them so popular; so why not admit it? It’s sales 101 – an opportunity to tell the world how much better and/or different BlackBerry 10 is from the rest.

Our experience with BlackBerry 10 has been good, and RIM is obviously working hard to make it a success, making careless interviews like this one doubly as frustrating to hear. Let’s hope Thorsten Heins does a better job of selling BlackBerry 10 during the global launch event later on today.

listen to incredibly awkward interview here:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p014f43k
 
RIM is dead. I'm just surprised they haven't been bought out by Microsoft or some other tech giant for their patent library.
 
How does his PR team not have a rote answer for a question about the competition ready for him?

That's interviewing 101.
 
I recall that interview got promoted to the front page of BBC News. "Listen to the interview where a Blackberry rep ignores the elephant in the room". Certainly, the BBC got a few laughs out of it.
 
I guess BlackberRIM will have to go back and further consult creative director ALICIA KEYS for her insight on how to make a smartphone.
 
I can't believe someone actually wrote a news article on this like it matters haha. They clearly have learned something by finally letting up on the way they do things. I don't get the point of the question other than to get a guy at Blackberry admit they did something wrong when they clearly get it already. Kicking a person while they are down.
 
How does answering questions reflect the sale of the BB10?

You don't HAVE to acknowledge your competitors in interviews, ever.
I'll speak to this because I worked in the PR department for a large company once, and I also worked for a magazine that focused on the tech industry (so I largely interviewed spokespersons, CMOs, basically people whose jobs are to represent the brand).

For an open interview like this (where the source doesn't demand a list of the questions), you have to be prepared with the company line for a couple of specific topics. Questions about competitors would be number one on that list - a pretty flat, basic statement saying pretty much nothing about it.

It's just bizarre that a Managing Director (which is the English equivalent to CEO) wouldn't be prepared to deliver a flat answer to this.

This is more embarrassing for Blackberry UK's PR team than anything else.
 
That was awful. Did they not expect anyone to bring up Apple or iPhone? It sounded like he was expecting to go in to a softball interview. Sorry, you are blackberry, if you do an interview people are going to ask about how much of a fuck up you've been the last few years. Some PR people need to be polishing up their resumes. Massive failure.
 
you're right . I was looking for a Youtube version to embed since the interview I listened to was embedded on the BBC site. I'll edit it now.

I'm glad you posted the original video though because it shows he didn't ignore Apple, he ignored everything. He didn't answer a single question regardless of how much of it related to Apple.

Consequently, I now have to wonder why that website and probably others made the headline. Is it incompetence or are they simply being deceptive in order to get clicks? Whatever the reason, it doesn't speak well of the site.
 
Blackberry will easily beat Windows phones. 3rd place is all they are going to get, but that might be good enough.

I don't think so. Microsoft is a huge company and mobile phones are only a portion of their income. For Blackberry it's everything. In my opinion the only thing that could save them is moving to Android.
 
How does answering questions reflect the sale of the BB10?

You don't HAVE to acknowledge your competitors in interviews, ever.

If you are not answering questions why are you at the interview matey?

This is a valid and IMO straightforward question to answer, even if you want to toe the company line and waffle through it a simple end user experience generic answer would have done.

Hell off the top of my head also there is vertical integration with respect to the app store and other services like music, movies and subscription based services. Integration with others search, twitter and facebook inboxing for delivering a more useful product to consumers.

But this F U I am not even going to mention my biggest competitor but carry on reading off some pre-prepared hymn sheet is just bizarre.
 
I don't think so. Microsoft is a huge company and mobile phones are only a portion of their income. For Blackberry it's everything. In my opinion the only thing that could save them is moving to Android.

BB10 is getting infinitely more converge and hype than any W7/8 phone. It's not like it will very difficult either considering Window's market share.
 
Since I live in Canada there has been a worrying amount of Blackberry hype and feelings that the company is turning around. Hopefully the European and US launches can fix this.
 
How can you expect to compete with Apple if you don't at least acknowledge they did something right?

This and

No companies, especially ones in the midst of a make-or-break relaunch, can afford to ignore the competition – or at least, give the impression of doing so. Apple slings lawsuits at its enemies to undermine their products, Samsung makes TV adverts which poke fun at the iPhone and Apple’s clientele, and Google fills its competitors phones with its own, super-popular apps. We’d be surprised if RIM hadn’t been studying the iPhone, iOS, Android and the Galaxy S3 to see what makes them so popular; so why not admit it? It’s sales 101 – an opportunity to tell the world how much better and/or different BlackBerry 10 is from the rest.

This, is such bullshit. Honestly, if they cannot say anything nice, then I would rather they shut up about the competition completely. I am struggling to recall a time where Samsung, Apple, Microsoft or Google have been directly asked about one anothers devices, and haven't responded with something snarky childish and offensive.

These interviewers just sound pissed that after repeatedly fishing for it, he refused them a combative attack response that they could Pull-Quote for their fucking article. How many times have ANY of the other companies gone out of their way to admit that the other did something right? Where is the quote from Google about how iTunes match was such a great idea, or Apples quote about how great an idea the notification shade was, or Microsofts quote about what Android did right, or Samsungs quote about what the iPhone does right?

Noone ever does this. Pretending like this is new is ridiculous, the media seems to really want to shit on BB pretty badly. I'm not even a fan, and I wouldn't buy one of BB's smartphones unless forced, but I just.... I cant stand the bullshit. It sucks that I feel like Im leaping to their defense, because honestly, they could dry up and die tomorrow and it wouldn't make me any difference. But it does seem to me that they are being treated a little unfairly lately.
 
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