10 things to know about RIM's new CEO, Thorsten Heins

By Al Sacco, CIO |  IT Management/Strategy, RIM, Thorsten Heins Add a new comment

Thorsten Heins /> 
<p class=IDG News Service

BlackBerry-maker Research In Motion (RIM) yesterday appointed a brand new chief executive officer and president, Thorsten Heins. The move follows months of pressure from RIM shareholders and others to oust former RIM co-CEOs, Mike Lazaridis and Jim Balsillie. (In fact, I wrote a piece earlier this month explaining why a major leadership change was in order at RIM.)

Check out the following list for 10 interesting tidbits on Mr. Heins, his past and his plans for RIM and BlackBerry in the coming months and years.

1) Thorsten Heins is of German origin, and his middle name is Gerhard.

"I'm German, and I'm a big fan of the term 'process discipline'," he said with laugh in a conference call this morning.

In addition to his role at RIM, Heins is also a Board Member of the German Canadian Chamber of Commerce in Toronto, according to BusinessWeek.com.

2) Heins has been with RIM since December 2007, serving as a SVP of the company's handheld business unit and then as one of RIMs two chief operating officers. He played key roles in the creation of RIMs product portfolio. Before working for RIM, Heins was employed by Siemens, starting in 1984 just after his graduation from the University of Hannover in Germany, where he earned a master's degree in science and physics.

3) Heins says he is open to licensing the BlackBerry OS, but it's not his main concern at this point.

"I will entertain those discussions; I will assess the business opportunity for RIM," Heins said. "And I will make the decision together with the board. It's not my focus. "

However, he does believe that the upcoming BlackBerry 10 handheld OS, which is expected to be released along with at least one new device in late 2012, will become an attractive option for hardware makers looking to license software.

"I'm absolutely confident that BlackBerry 10 will prove itself," Heins said

4) Heins is 54 years old, and he and his wife Petra have two children, a daughter and a son.

5) Heins is set on targeting the vast consumer audience, and he'll be bringing on a new marketing chief in the very near future to help with this effort. (RIM's former CMO Keith Pardy threw in the reigns last year.)

"We need to be closer to our consumer user base. We're well positioned with CIOs...but in the US, we need to do a better job there [targeting consumers]," Heins said. "I expect that person to take this a notch up."

"I want us to focus more on consumers and consumer marketing. That is a major change for us. That is an element that we need to strengthen, that we need to build," he said.

And the new marketing leader's role will also be to listen, not just to communicate one way, Heins said.

6) Heins doesn't believe any sort of major change is in order for the BlackBerry maker, beyond a renewed focus on the consumer.

"I dont think drastic change is needed, we are evolving," Heins said. "This is not a seismic change; it is scaling the company further."

7) In fiscal year 2011, Heins cleared about $2 million in salary--$1,922,642, to be exact--according to BusinessWeek.com, though you can bet he will receive a healthy pay raise along with his CEO promotion. (RIM hasn't offered any specific details on compensation.)

8) Heins rides a motorcycle, but it's not a Harley Davidson. Like a good German, Heins is all about the BMW bikes, according to the Guardian.uk.

9) Heins lived in Florida for four years, and as such, he supports NBA basketball team the Miami Heat.

10) Everyone, including media, RIM employees, critics and BlackBerry users alike, will soon begin calling Mr. Heins "Thor"...or at least I will--and you should too.


Originally published on CIO |  Click here to read the original story.

ITworld LIVE

IT Management/StrategyWhite Papers & Webcasts

White Paper

The Cost of Retaining Aging IT Infrastructure

This paper describes HP ProLiant Gen8 servers, the technology on which they are based, and the way they address many of the causes of operational costs found at customer sites. The hardware and software capabilities of the HP servers were designed to be proactive, reducing the effort and knowledge required to run the server systems and leveraging automation to reduce maintenance costs and IT staff costs.Intel and the Intel logo are trademarks of Intel Corporation in the U.S. and/or other countries.

White Paper

Converged Infrastructure for Dummies

As you know, everything is mobile, connected, interactive, and immediate. This is exactly why organizations need a highly agile IT infrastructure in order to keep pace with extreme fluctuations in business demand. This book will help you understand why infrastructure convergence has been widely accepted as the optimal approach for simplifying and accelerating your IT to deliver services at the speed of business while also shifting significantly more IT resources from operations to innovation.Intel and the Intel logo are trademarks of Intel Corporation in the U.S. and/or other countries.

White Paper

Finding the right cloud solutions for your organization

HP is driving the evolution of what we call the Instant-On Enterprise. It is an enterprise that embeds technology into everything it does to better serve citizens, partners, employees, and clients. We believe that today's Instant-On Enterprises need to think differently about how they source and deliver services that are enabled by technology. They need to take advantage of a hybrid delivery model-one that truly optimizes the mix between traditional IT, private cloud, and public cloud.Intel and the Intel logo are trademarks of Intel Corporation in the U.S. and/or other countries.

White Paper

Solve the 6 top problems in your data center Business White Paper

Whether your data center is large or small, it faces a similar set of roadblocks to efficiency, uptime, and ROI. This white paper reveals the six most common and intractable problems facing the data center and explains how to rectify them while improving efficiency and uptime.

White Paper

Gartner on the Network Infrastructure Market

The network infrastructure market has evolved rapidly, from one in which most organizations adhered to a single-vendor architecture to a more business-driven network architecture that increasingly uses a multivendor, best-of-breed approach. Gartner research found there is no operational advantage to maintaining a single-vendor approach; therefore, analyzing the functional and financial differences between vendors is key for building a network that best fits business requirements. This white paper reviews the enterprise networking market dynamics and reveals Gartner's recommendations on how to proceed.

See more White Papers | Webcasts

Ask a question

Ask a Question