Will 2007 Finally Be the Year of Mobility?
This entry was posted on 1/26/2007 1:43 PM and is filed under uncategorized.
IDC seems to think so. Sure, there are some hurdles that remain to
be cleared, but a reasonable amount of interoperability already exists.
Mobile devices themselves are finally powerful enough to handle just
about anything business app we can throw at them. The real question is,
when will enterprises realize this and adopt the technology that's
going boost their business into the next realm?
In speaking with
a major mobile enterprise hardware vendor about a year ago, I heard an
amazing statistic. He told me that 95 percent of field forces were
still using pencil and paper to get their work done. That's
ninety-five, not nine point five. That means the bulk of guys who get
into a truck each morning, drive to a job site, perform some work and
go home, where they complete some paperwork before calling it a day,
are probably wasting untold amounts of time and money for their
employers.
Granted, that was a year ago. The number is
probably in the 85 to 90 percent range now, given the continuing
explosions of mobile deployments, but it's still way too high a figure.
Pencil and paper just doesn't cut it. You cant' compete with it.
IDC's VP of mobile devices and communications, Scott Ellison, feels
that this is the year for enterprises to take advantage of the
interoperability of devices and networks. He thinks Shangri La is
finally on the horizon. I think it's already here, and has been for years.
There's
no excuse for enterprises not to adopt. Okay, okay, yeah, the prices
are sometimes daunting, but any reasonable ROI calculations can help
find the solution that's best for even the smallest organization.
Sometimes simple cell phones with timesheet programs do the trick. For
the busier mid-sized enterprise that rolls 100 trucks a day, scheduling
and dispatching software that relies on GPS data is critical for
long-term success. For sales organizations spread across the country,
smartphones equipped with customer relationship management and sales
force automation programs can help them follow up with leads and close
more sales.
All this technology is enabled by the high-speed
wireless networks being run by the major US carriers. You can access
just about any bit of enterprise information that you might need or
want to. Isn't it time you got started.