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BlackBerry CEO forges new partnerships

BlackBerry CEO John Chen blogs about not giving into hype

When John Chen took over as executive chair and CEO of financially-troubled BlackBerry exactly a year ago, he decided the company had to focus more on serving enterprise customers.

Today, the company released the latest version of its BES server, new features aimed at enterprises and a marketing campaign that hammers the message that BlackBerry solutions make enterprise communications secure.

Chen also warned mobile and enterprise device management competitors that he says made fun of BlackBerry’s falling sales a year ago that his company is coming back.

“Today my advice to them is I’m ending their party,” he told analysts and reporters in San Francisco. “We are not only a point product, not only an MDM solution provider, we’re an EMM  solution provider – very broad, very deep, and they need to understand that.  So they’re going to have to work for their living rather than have fun on us.”

As evidence of its willingness to fight back for market share the company announced a partnership with a handset maker and new applications for bringing in more revenue. These include:

Users will be able to schedule, start a meeting or join a meeting in progress, mute participants or kick someone out. Through Autojoin, a person can be included in a meeting by answering the phone. The idea is to make online meetings on a mobile device as easy as it is on a desktop. Not only is there a Meetings app for mobile devices, there are also ones for Windows and Mac desktop computers.

“We believe BBM Meetings will dramatically change the way people collaborate from a mobile-first perspective,” said Jeff Gadway, BlackBerry’s director of product marketing.

Separately, the company said BBM Protected will also be available for managed Android and iOS devices.

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