BlackBerry’s Best Trick: Nailing Work-Life Balance

BlackBerry’s Best Trick: Nailing Work-Life Balance


Today BlackBerry demoed what it’s calling BlackBerry Balance, a clever way of separating one’s personal and work lives in one device. You don’t see it as much these days but carrying two phones — one for business, one for pleasure — was commonplace not too long ago. I remember having a BlackBerry 6200 alongside my HipTop/Sidekick 2; and I’m sure a lot of you remember those days as well.

AU Editor’s Note: This post focuses on the US-market, but it BlackBerry Balance still has relevance in the AU market when BlackBerry 10 comes out in March.

But now that smartphones have been ingratiated into corporate IT infrastructures with beefed up security protocols, the need for work-issued BlackBerries has been on the decline. Not to mention the fact that it’s cheaper for employers to just have you use your own phone and pay for it yourself. Now you can have both your work and personal lives live on one single device.

Great, right? Eh. Not really

Don’t get me wrong, I like not having to carry around two devices but now, when I look at my phone, the lines between work and pleasure are blurred beyond recognition. Which is why Balance seems like a neat feature if executed properly. Others have tried this before, and failed. But this is RIM BlackBerry; if there’s any one company that understands enterprise and the need for security, it’s the folks in the Great White North.


Back in 2010, T-Mobile came up with myModes for its line of myTouch devices.

The core problem with myModes is that it didn’t go deep enough. Switching between profiles based on time or location simply wasn’t enough. Corporate secrets could still be accessed across each profile whereas Balance locks you into one profile at a time and does not allow for anything living in one profile to leave said profile.

VMware and ARM have both brought up the notion of having a virtual layer for smartphones for a while now but neither have actually made it to market.


More recently (and by recently I mean last summer), AT&T packaged together a product for enterprise called Toggle, which by the looks of it does exactly the same thing as Balance.

Toggle currently works with Android and iOS and was supposed to be rolled out to support Windows Phone and BlackBerry 10 by the end of last year. We’re still waiting to hear back from AT&T on that one.

The idea of having a harmonious work-life balance on a smartphone hasn’t ever been fully realised because none of the aforementioned ideas were ever baked into the OS. Balance, though, is baked in with each profile existing in its own sphere. For example, an IT manager can wipe the enterprise side of an employee’s device if that person decides to leave the company without ever touching the personal side.

Even if BlackBerry 10 sucks as a whole, it seems like they nailed at least one thing. Whether it’s enough to pry your fingers off of your iPhone is a whole other matter.