After a miserable 2011 in which Research In Motion struggled with a myriad of issues, the company’s co-CEOs and co-chairmen, Mike Lazaridis and Jim Balsillie, have stepped down.
In a statement released Sunday evening, Thorsten Heins was named as the new president and chief executive officer. Heins joined the Waterloo, Ontario-based company in 2007.
In the statement, Lazaridis said, “There comes a time in the growth of every successful company when the founders recognize the need to pass the baton to new leadership. Jim and I went to the Board and told them that we thought that time was now.”
He continued, “With BlackBerry 7 now out, PlayBook 2.0 shipping in February and BlackBerry 10 expected to ship later this year, the company is entering a new phase, and we felt it was time for a new leader to take it through that phase and beyond. Jim, the Board and I all agreed that leader should be Thorsten Heins.”
On the decision to step down, Balsillie said, “I agree this is the right time to pass the baton to new leadership, and I have complete confidence in Thorsten, the management team and the company.”
The company, once the leading player in the smartphone industry with its range of BlackBerry devices, has been struggling in recent years in the face of stiff competition from Apple’s iPhone and devices running Google’s Android mobile operating system.
RIM’s move into the tablet market last year has also proved problematic, with its PlayBook device failing to catch on with consumers. And in October, BlackBerry users had to endure a four-day service blackout, forcing Lazaridis into making a personal video apology. More recently, RIM announced it was to delay the launch of its much-anticipated BlackBerry 10 operating system, another blow in its efforts to turn the company’s fortunes around.
Recent pressure from investors left the company’s two founders with little choice but to step down. Now let’s see if a new person at the helm is enough to turn things around, or whether the company will continue to struggle in a market which it once led.
This article was originally posted on Digital Trends
More from Digital Trends
RIM to release two more PlayBook tablets in 2012, BlackBerry 10 to follow in September?
BlackBerry Milan and Colt canceled, all hopes for OS 10 lie with the London
RIM price-cut: All BlackBerry PlayBook models now $299
Amazon isn’t the only one, as Microsoft and Nokia also considered bidding for RIM



1 comment