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Boomers prefer PCs, but Gen Y wants smart phones

Boomers prefer PCs, but Gen Y wants smart phones

By:  Jennifer Kavur  On: 30 Mar 2009 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

Issuing corporate smart phones isn’t just about catering to the preferences of the next generation. As a lower-cost alternative to company laptops, mobile phones might be better suited to the current economic climate

“People don’t want to carry a personal device and a corporate device. If they’re willing to pay the money for a personal device, let them use it,” he said.

However, there are more risks associated with a personal device because the employee owns it and it’s hard to update, Kerrevala pointed out. “If the person loses it or there’s a lot of corporate information on it and they walk out the door, then they take all those contacts with them,” he said.

Employees who sync their personal devices to corporate networks should be allowed to if they agree to adhere to corporate standards first, advised Kerravala. “That’s a good compromise,” he said. “The user gets to use their own personal device. In return, they are willing to adhere to the corporate standards around security and usability.”

One of the challenges, whether the phone belongs to the employee or the organization, is protecting company data, Hickernell pointed out. “You’ve got to ensure you are instating minimum security at least, which means enforcing a policy on the phone that locks the phone after inactivity and forces the employee to establish and use a PIN code of some sort,” he said.

But mobile phones still pose less of a security risk than laptops, according to Kerravala. When a laptop is lost or stolen, the damage to the corporation is potentially huge, but it’s more minimized with a mobile phone, he said.

“I think mobile phone security is ahead of laptop security,” said Kerravala. “And a mobile phone is an always-on device, while a laptop is not. So securing a laptop is actually more difficult.”

Companies can protect themselves by allowing the shift from laptops to smart phones take place, said Kerravala. “If all someone needs is access to e-mail and contact numbers, give them a mobile phone,” he said.

Smart phones, however, raise challenges that enterprises don’t face with laptops.

“The user interface is so different that it almost has to be personal preference. There’s no mouse and keyboard, some people like touch screens and some people don’t … there’s too many decision points in what people prefer in a mobile phone that it’s very hard to make that a corporate standard,” said Kerravala.

Selecting a device that is only available through one carrier creates another potential obstacle, Kerravala added. “Not all cell phones work in all areas … you could wind up with a user who couldn’t use the phone when they are at home. That’s not very practical,” he said.

Catering to personal preferences and allowing for choice will result in happier, more productive employees, according to Kerravala. “Historically, companies have wanted to control the end point, but there’s so much variability in mobile phones that trying to control that decision is really going to create that employee resentment,” he said.

Yankee Group has written extensively on the concept of the consumerization of the enterprise, Kerravala pointed out. “Companies need to find a way to embrace this concept of consumerization and allow workers to have a wide variety of choices in the tools they want to use,” he said.










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Jennifer Kavur Jennifer Kavur Jennifer Kavur was a senior writer for ComputerWorld Canada from 2008 to 2010.
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