The exec exodus at Research In Motion (Nasdaq: RIMM) continues.

The latest two to bail are Alan Brenner, senior VP for the BlackBerry platform, and Alistair Mitchell, VP for BlackBerry Messenger. The list of higher-ups who have recently called it quits keeps growing, the most noteworthy being ex-co-CEO and ex-co-Chairman Jim Balsillie, who co-founded RIM, after the company reported earnings last month.

Here's a taste of some of the names that have abandoned ship recently.

Name

Title

Time

Keith Pardy Chief marketing officer March 2011
Brian Wallace VP of digital marketing and media June 2011
Don Morrison Chief operating officer July 2011 (retired)
Ryan Bidan Senior product manager, BlackBerry PlayBook July 2011
Mike Kirkup Senior director of global developer relations August 2011
Tyler Lessard VP for global alliances and developer relations September 2011
Jim Balsillie Director, co-CEO, and co-chairman March 2012
David Yach Chief technical officer of software March 2012
Jim Rowan Chief operating officer of global operations March 2012
Alan Brenner Senior VP of BlackBerry platform April 2012
Alistair Mitchell VP of BlackBerry Messenger April 2012

That list contains an awful lot of "chiefs," "VPs," and "seniors" whonare moving on to bigger and better things. There was also a report back in October that execs were politely declining to buy RIM shares on the open market. Not exactly confidence-inspiring, is it?

The consumerization of IT continues to wreak havoc on RIM, as many enterprises now let employees pick their own devices. Instead of opting for BlackBerrys, workers increasingly want either a Google (Nasdaq: GOOG) Android device or an Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) iPhone. Those two platforms combined now comprise almost three-quarters of all smartphones sold in the world.

Not even RIM's top brass has faith in the company anymore, so why should investors?

There are better ways to play the mobile revolution, starting from the inside. Get this report on 3 Hidden Winners of the iPhone, iPad, and Android Revolution for a list of critical component suppliers that are much more promising than RIM. It's totally free.