The Good fight over mobile email

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Q&A

In the market for mobile business communication, Good Technology is trying to put its best foot forward.

The Santa Clara, California-based company creates software that lets pocket-size devices handle wireless corporate email. It's the same kind of software that made BlackBerry-maker Research In Motion famous.

At Good's helm is Danny Shader. The 44-year-old chief executive previously worked as a vice-president and general manager at Amazon.com. He joined Amazon when it acquired Accept.com, a company he co-founded and led as CEO. Prior to that, Shader was an entrepreneur-in-residence with Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers and with Benchmark Capital. Shader also was on the ground floor at Netscape Communications, where he built Netscape's international marketing team.

ZDNet UK sister site CNET News.com spoke with Shader shortly before the company announced a partnership with US telco Sprint earlier this month.

Q: What kinds of change are you seeing in the marketplace and what are your opportunities?
A: Well, you know, starting at a high level, we really believe that the industry is at the beginning of the next wave of computing. We've had the mainframe era, we've had the miniframe era, we've had the PC/laptop era, and I think we're just at the beginning of the handheld enterprise computing era. The first killer app for that is email, but it's clear that people want to do a lot more than that. They want access to all of their critical backend data sources, and as a result, there's a fundamental shift going on toward industry standard operating systems — and away from proprietary systems.

If the so-called first killer app for business handhelds is email, what are the second and even the third killer applications we could see out of this handheld computing era?
I think CRM and field sales-force automation, trouble ticketing [alerting IT managers to problems in a network] and such, are the next emerging apps. But I think there's a subtlety to this email thing that I think people lose. There's a tendency right now to describe the category as just email. What's interesting is with email, you know you can read your messaging. The question is, how, if you're an enterprise, how do you securely deploy 10,000 users of messaging or, for that matter, even 100 users of messaging? So, the email may be email, but the systems involved in deploying that are increasingly sophisticated, and so it's a huge matter of effort on Good's part and, I suspect, on others' parts in order to make sure that that's manageable and secure. And I think that's where the next, you know, big chunk of effort goes, and then beyond that you get to these applications like CRM and trouble ticketing and beyond.

How you are trying to get more people to think of your company first as opposed to the competition like RIM's BlackBerry? When people talk about business messaging, the first thing that comes to mind for most people is the BlackBerry. It's almost like a verb in some ways.
Actually it's a noun and I wish we'd chosen a noun as the name of our company... It's like they picked a better name, I think. But our customer attraction speaks for itself. Microsoft, [Palm], Motorola, Nokia, Dell... all those guys know who we are.

There are a couple of issues at work here. One is that if you believe as we do, this is a handheld computing business and not a messaging business. And if there is a natural affinity for standard operating systems, then frankly, I think it'll be Motorola and Nokia and Microsoft and Palm who will drive a share shift from RIM's proprietary hardware to standards-based hardware.

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