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Mobility is not just about e-mail and Web surfing

Mobility is not just about e-mail and Web surfing

By:  Kathleen Lau  On: 10 May 2009 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

A recent study from research firm IDC Canada shows that organizations are fooling themselves if they think they’ve got a mobility strategy just because their workers can check e-mail and surf the Web on the road. One company’s strategy to mobilize its sales and customer service reps

And while the IDC study found that the economic downturn and tightened IT budgets will have an effect on adoption of a mobile strategy, Snider said in the case of Securit, mobility still proved to be an easy sell. Securit’s mobile strategy is largely driven by customers who demand better customer tracking among other things, and the benefits to sales representatives is just as obvious as “that’s an easy way of penetrating the marketplace.”

In the case of Securit’s sales representatives, Snider said it made little sense, from a cost perspective, to equip them with laptops. Instead, the company was drawn to RIM’s technology given the fact that it continues to evolve business-appropriate functionality, he said. Currently, Securit’s sales representatives “don’t have a real tool other than a notepad to do their jobs,” said Snider, adding that by applying their sales process to a mobile platform means “you’re getting mobility, and the system tool is replicating the process which is already defined.”

Similarly, mobility will replace the customers service representatives’ “pieces of paper with routing instructions attached to a clipboard.”

The rapid growth in mobile users has changed the way companies conduct business, which in turn has increased customer expectations for near-real-time business processes, said Mark Aboud, president and managing director with SAP Canada. While there are challenges to mobilizing employees, like cut budgets and lack of management buy-in, Aboud said “progressive thinking global companies and fast-growing customers are realizing that there are significant opportunities to improve productivity and business agility.”

According to Ruest, when assessing the need for a mobile strategy, organizations should ascertain the value based on what they are already doing mobility-wise and the industry they toil in. Ruest explained that if the company is still trying to go mobile on e-mail and the Internet, it’s pointless to jump to something like financial applications. Besides determining the value of such a strategy, organizations should identify the business-critical processes that will benefit, the degree to which their workforce is dispersed or in transit, and whether business operations require employees to be online in real-time.

“If you can answer partly yes to these questions, then it’s a justification to develop at least a roadmap for a mobile strategy,” said Ruest.










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Kathleen Lau Kathleen Lau was a senior writer with ITWorldCanada.com and ComputerWorld Canada from December 2006 to August 2011.In her role as senior writer, she covered broadly technology news and issues r... more
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