Deutsche bank replaces BlackBerrys with iPhones

epa04533112 The Blackberry Classic on display after a press event for the launch in New York, New York, USA, 17 December 2014.  EPA/ANDREW GOMBERT

Bloomberg

Deutsche Bank AG is bowing to the inevitable and replacing the BlackBerry devices that were issued to its staff with iPhones.
A Deutsche Bank spokesman confirmed that the lender is phasing out the devices, without commenting further. The company’s employees were increasingly giving up their BlackBerry phones in favour of ones they’d bought themselves under a Bring-Your-Own-Device (BYOD) policy, according to two people briefed on the matter. Some clients had made fun of the bank for using BlackBerrys.
Deutsche Bank kept BlackBerry devices for longer than many of its competitors, but even the company’s chief executive officer, John Cryan, conducts much of his business on an iPad.
BlackBerry devices were once ubiquitous at banks, but their popularity began to wane when Apple started selling its first iPhone in 2007.
BlackBerry Ltd. ended the production of smartphones last year after sales collapsed. It sold the license to manufacture BlackBerry-branded phones to a Chinese company, TCL. Shipments of smartphones running on BlackBerry’s operating system plunged to about 800,000 last year from 32.5 million in 2012, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
The total amount of smartphones shipped doubled to 1.47 billion units from about 730 million.
“Deutsche Bank’s decision to use other devices has been expected and doesn’t change our relationship,” BlackBerry spokeswoman Sarah McKinney said. The new iPhones use BlackBerry’s device-management software, she said.

Leave a Reply

Send this to a friend