Motorola Buys Wireless Firm Good

By Nate Mook | Published November 10, 2006, 2:24 PM

Motorola on Friday ramped up its efforts to compete against Research In Motion with the acquisition of Good Technology, a provider of wireless e-mail services that work on existing handsets, including Motorola's popular Q.

While Motorola has been working hard to break into the enterprise market, the manufacturer has barely made a dent into the dominance of RIM's ubiquitous BlackBerry. Good, which is already used by 12,000 companies, could help change that.

Unlike the BlackBerry service, which is tied to specific devices, Good has taken a software-based approach. Its corporate e-mail and security services run on a variety of handsets from numerous manufacturers, such as Nokia, Samsung, Palm, HP and HTC's Windows Mobile 5.0 devices.

Motorola did not say how it planned to further integrate Good's offerings into its own product lines, or what this means for Motorola's rivals. The company will be put in the awkward position of supplying software for Nokia, with which it is fiercely battling for market share.

"Good Technology's software and managed service deliver a rich user experience, low cost of ownership, industry- leading security and enterprise-class support," said Motorola Mobile Devices division president Ron Garriques. "This acquisition will continue to strengthen Motorola as a leading provider of mobility devices and solutions both for enterprise customers and consumers."

Good also gets a great deal out of the acquisition as well: Motorola's massive marketing capabilities. With limited resources, the company has always had trouble actively selling itself to businesses, while Microsoft and RIM face no such constraints. But with Motorola behind it, that will surely change next year.

The biggest effect of the deal could be on Palm, which has recently begun leaning towards Microsoft in its products aimed at businesses. Although the company continues to make Palm OS based devices, enterprise software is lacking for the platform, while Microsoft recently deployed a push e-mail update to Windows Mobile 5.0 that offers enterprises a solution that integrates with their Exchange servers.

In turn, Palm may be pushed further into Microsoft territory, as Good was a primary provider of business software for Palm OS on the Treo 650 and Treo 700p.

Motorola did not disclose the financial terms of the deal, but said the transaction was expected to close in early 2007.

Comments

View comments by with a score of at least

I wish Motorola would buy NTP and fire the whole staff.

Score: 0

|

I just like the title of the article!

Score: 0

|

Is anyone seeing what I am seeing? Another target for NTP.

Score: 0

|

Yep.

Score: 0

|

'A pivot from war to peace:' The AMD + Intel armistice, in their own words

An extraordinary day in technology history is recognized by two long-time rivals that mutually decided it's futile to fight anyplace else except the marketplace.

PS3, Xbox to soon get Twitter, Facebook integration

Both Microsoft's Xbox 360 and Sony's PlayStation 3 will integrate with Facebook in the near future.

Windows Marketplace for Mobile now available in browser, iTunes' App Store still not

You can now check out what Windows Marketplace for Mobile has to offer without a Windows Phone.

Microsoft damage control after marketer claims Win7 inspired by Mac

Have you ever said anything you wish you could take back? Ever? No? Not even once? Well then, you won't sympathize with a mid-level Microsoft manager today.

Blockbuster's way down, but poised for a comeback

Though it took a serious beating in 2009, Blockbuster CEO Jim Keyes says the company can turn it around.

iTunes Preview deson't go far enough to create Web-based option for store

Apple has rolled out iTunes Preview, a Web interface for browsing iTunes.

PDC 2009 Preview: The move to Office 2010 and Visual Studio 2010

The major focus of Microsoft's conference next week will likely be explaining why two pillars of its software sales strategy deserve to remain where they are.

Dell's first smartphone aids the Android onslaught

Longtime PC leader Dell has finally announced its Android-based smarphone.

After the Intel + AMD armistice: Do we really want a level playing field?

Scott Fulton On Point: One by one, the reasons for us to continue suspending the course toward open and fair competition in IT, are dropping like flies.

FLO TV launches pocketable, smartphone-like TVs

Qualcomm's FLO TV Personal Television made by HTC launches in retail today.

Google acquires Gizmo5, builds IP telephony portfolio

Google Voice today confirmed rumors that it would acquire IP telephony company Gizmo5