Enterprise

November 26, 2010 - 4:09 pm No Comments

Enterprise Mobility – A Changing Ecosystem

Wireless enterprise applications have already been around longer than most of us care to remember. In the eighties and early nineties, FedEx, UPS, Hertz, and Avis were early adopters in enabling mission critical functions with wireless technologies. During mid-nineties we had seen single-consumer applications like stock trade and wireless enablement of consumer content flooded the market. That was the start-up for Enterprise mobility. Only a few companies started formulating their enterprise mobility strategy and experimented with trials.

Now Enterprise mobilization is the high priority for enterprises that have mobile workforce and are seeking to be competitive and efficient. But during seventies and eighties wireless technologies were first adopted by individuals and companies primarily for business usage in the 1970s and into 1980s. In 1990s, with the advent of wide-area paging services, there were 22 million pagers. But at the stage people themselves purchased new technologies and the resultant devices with their own money and they strongly believed that the technology would help them be more efficient in their jobs while the corporate powers were slow to accept and adopt new technologies and devices.

But with time, the evolution of the still-nascent business mobility ecosystem along with its key drivers, like consumer behavior is shaping the segment. It is also exploring the changing roles and relationships of the ecosystem’s key players; projections for growth in business mobility; and the ROI of business mobility. It offers advice to businesses that are considering business mobility solutions. And it points out a number of changes that members of the business mobility ecosystem will need to make in order for business mobility to evolve to the point of fruition, where companies are willingly ready to purchase solutions as a strategic investment, and where the solutions are as solid but also as flexible and easy to buy and integrate in a heterogeneous, global market. Lastly, the paper takes a look at a few large companies that have made significant steps toward strategic and holistic adoption of business mobility.

Today, enterprise customers are more willing to engage with new technologies and devices but are still considered to be ‘slow adopters’, requiring vendors to engage in prolonged sales cycles and drawn out pilot projects and tests.

In future more sophisticated devices, more reliable network with higher bandwidth, new enabling technologies, and more mature enterprise mobility solutions and deployments across all industry verticals would come. Corporations will need to be thorough and diligent in their solution-selection process. They will be well advised to do long-term planning to adapt well to the changing ecosystem of enterprise mobility.

Number s of Enterprise Mobility Solution provider companies worldwide are implementing mobility solutions with accelerating business cycles, increase productivity, reduce operating costs and extend their enterprise infrastructure. Before going for Business Mobility solution, one should look for a developers’ company who can offer you secure application on the go.

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