SHARE
Facebook X Pinterest WhatsApp

Motorola Channel to Get Good

Looking to expand its distribution of Good Technology – a rival to BlackBerry — Motorola announced March 25 that it would offer its Good Mobile Messaging and Good Mobile Intranet through its 10,000 PartnerSelect channel partners. The announcement marries the channel program of one Motorola acquisition, Symbol Technologies, with the technology of a second Motorola […]

Written By
thumbnail Jessica Davis
Jessica Davis
Mar 26, 2008
Channel Insider content and product recommendations are editorially independent. We may make money when you click on links to our partners. Learn More

Looking to expand its distribution of Good Technology – a rival to BlackBerry — Motorola announced March 25 that it would offer its Good Mobile Messaging and Good Mobile Intranet through its 10,000 PartnerSelect channel partners. The announcement marries the channel program of one Motorola acquisition, Symbol Technologies, with the technology of a second Motorola acquisition, Good Technology.

And the announcement came just one day before the company revealed that it plans to split itself into two separate companies — one selling mobile devices and the other focusing on network equipment, enterprise and public safety business.

Good is considered a part of the network equipment and enterprise business, so the split should not effect any partner plan changes that are underway.

Dan Rudolph, Good’s director of product marketing, said in an interview earlier this week with Channel Insider that partners would get access to all of Good’s products in early April. In addition, Motorola would expand the offering to India and select Asia Pacific markets.

"This is an important move for Motorola because it helps build out the vision of end-to-end mobility," Rudolph said.

Rudolph said that Good’s products primarily had been sold direct to customers or through carrier resellers who sold handsets.

"By offering it through partners we gain a huge additional distribution capability, and it also gives us an international reach," he said.

In return, partners get software licensing revenue and an annual recurring per-user fee, Rudolph said. Some VAR and solution provider partners also work with the company’s carrier partners, with the carriers offering a bounty to VARs who resell Good.

Most of the company’s 10,000 resellers go through distribution, Rudolph said, and in North America distributors include Avnet and Ingram Micro.

Motorola announced plans to acquire privately held Good Technology, which offers a rival network service to BlackBerry’s, in November 2006. The technology has been sold primarily through cell phone carriers.

Motorola also acquired Symbol Technologies in a $3.9 billion deal, first announced in September 2006. Symbol provides enterprise mobility devices, particularly clients, and other technologies such as RFID, and is most widely used in industries such as retail and manufacturing.

Recommended for you...

Eaton Announces Solution to Mitigate AI Power Bursts
Jordan Smith
Sep 15, 2025
Ericsson Brings Agentic AI to NetCloud for Private 5G
Allison Francis
Sep 15, 2025
How ArmorPoint is Unifying Security for MSSPs & Customers
Victoria Durgin
Sep 15, 2025
Tenable: AI and Hybrid Cloud Growth Outpacing Security Defenses
Luis Millares
Sep 15, 2025
Channel Insider Logo

Channel Insider combines news and technology recommendations to keep channel partners, value-added resellers, IT solution providers, MSPs, and SaaS providers informed on the changing IT landscape. These resources provide product comparisons, in-depth analysis of vendors, and interviews with subject matter experts to provide vendors with critical information for their operations.

Property of TechnologyAdvice. © 2025 TechnologyAdvice. All Rights Reserved

Advertiser Disclosure: Some of the products that appear on this site are from companies from which TechnologyAdvice receives compensation. This compensation may impact how and where products appear on this site including, for example, the order in which they appear. TechnologyAdvice does not include all companies or all types of products available in the marketplace.