Mark Zuckerberg is no smarter than Canadian entrepreneurs, says Jim Balsillie
“These guys are no smarter or better than our people”.
Former BlackBerry co-CEO Jim Balsillie was at Toronto’s Empire Club Tuesday alongside Sean Silcoff and Jacquie McNish, authors of “Losing the Signal: The Spectacular Rise and Fall of BlackBerry”, a book that provides unprecedented insight into the demise of BlackBerry’s hardware business following the release of the iPhone.
For Jim Balsillie, who has been something of a recluse in the years since he left the company formerly known as Research in Motion, it was the second time he went public in the span of weeks, and he continued on a theme he raised in a May 8 editorial for the Globe and Mail. Balsillie said Canada was producing world class tech talent, but not fostering an environment for its entrepreneurs to succeed.
“I remember meeting Mark (Zuckerberg) when he was itty-bitty, really small, all these guys..and these guys are no smarter or better than our people,” he said. “But there is something missing in the infrastructure and we have to fix it.”
Balsillie says the Canadian business community, its universities and government are essentially setting tech entrepreneurs up to fail.
“I have a real issue on sending our great entrepreneurs into battle under resourced and under supported and nothing bothers me more than those that have not fulfilled their public policy obligations, blaming entrepreneurs for an absence of fire in the belly,” said Balsillie.
“More than 16 years after RIM launched BlackBerry, it remains the only Canadian company listed among the world’s top innovators because it owns one of the most valuable technology portfolios in the world,” he said. “My business experience is unique in Canada, but I do not claim to have all the answers. I am certain, however, that Canada’s innovation performance will not improve unless the country’s business, university and political leadership comes together to consider radically different policies, programs and tools. Canadian taxpayers deserve better returns on their enormous investments in innovation.”
Balsillie had praise for the “Losing the Signal” saying that “80 or 90 RIM People” emailed him about the book. “They said wow, it’s the true story, and everybody has said it’s the truth.”
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Cantech Letter founder and editor Nick Waddell has lived in five Canadian provinces and is proud of his country's often overlooked contributions to the world of science and technology. Waddell takes a regular shift on the Canadian media circuit, making appearances on CTV, CBC and BNN, and contributing to publications such as Canadian Business and Business Insider.
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American on American soil growing under American capitalist market differs from...
Canadian on American soil growing under American capitalist market. Americans are notoriously loyal to the home brand, but the irony is that most goods are made in China.