Tools to Take You Mobile
Added 15th Dec 2008Article Highlights
- 94 percent companies in US that have at least one mobile data application. In early 2007, that figure stood at 74 percent
- Frost & Sullivan predicts that the use of mobiles for field-service applications will increase from 1.5 million subscribers to 11 million in 2013
- Companies are better at getting data into and out of their core apps than providing mobile access to that data
E-mail is no way to run a cafe. Au Bon Pain VP of IT Randy Burkhart knew that on weekends, managers were logging in to e-mail multiple times, checking for potential issues at their stores. Even a BlackBerry was too slow to let them respond to problems quickly.
Improvements to smartphones and wireless networks make moving applications onto smartphonesmore viable — even for small companies.
But a couple of years ago, Burkhart noticed that smartphones were becoming powerful computers in their own right. So about a 18 months ago he started deploying corporate apps on Windows Mobile cell phones, such as a daily P&L report and alerts that inform managers about staffing or supply shortages. The initial application was deployed in six weeks. Managers can pick between Motorola Q and Treo phones.
The result has been a quicker response time for all kinds of problems. When an Au Bon Pain catering van ran into a customer's car in a parking lot recently, an area director didn't depend on slow e-mail. He used his phone to take pictures of the accident and send it to concerned people. "There is a time value to data," Burkhart says, and smartphones let his company get more value for their time. Au Bon Pain is not alone. Many other companies that got their feet wet with wireless e-mail with the BlackBerry are primed to move other apps onto smartphones, says Andy Seybold, a veteran wireless consultant.
Improvements to smartphones themselves (more memory, better processors) and to wireless networks (they're faster) make such projects more viable, even for small companies. Frost & Sullivan predicts that the use of mobile phones for field-service applications will increase from 1.5 million subscribers this year to 11 million in 2013.
But there are obstacles that remain. For example, for the most part, wireless carriers aren't used to selling enterprise systems to companies because enterprises require different types of support than carriers are normally set up to deliver.
Companies are better at getting data into and out of their core apps than providing mobile access to that data. Nevertheless, data integration with enterprise systems poses other barriers. Phones have vastly different capabilities and user interfaces.
"There's a stream of devices," says Terry Stepien, president of Sybase's iAnywhere, which helps companies make apps work better for remote and mobile workers.
"Some will have keyboards, some won't. Some will have GPS, some won't. They'll have different operating systems. It's a heterogeneous world and it looks like it's going to stay that way," says Stepien. Companies can try to build their own interfaces to extend applications to mobile phones. They can use a variety of middleware platforms, such as the iAnywhere's Information Anywhere suite, or they can turn to mobile-oriented integrators to do the job.
Wireless Three Ways
Au Bon Pain chose to go the integrator route. It got help from Enterprise Mobile, which is backed by Microsoft and works primarily with companies using Windows Mobile. Its main work is shepherding companies through the quirks of the cell phone market, such as helping them choose from idiosyncratic cell phone plans.
Enterprise Mobile helped Au Bon Pain with security and user-interface questions, like what to do when a phone is lost and how to present data on a 2-inch-by-2-inch screen.
Delta Air Lines, meanwhile, used iAnywhere's Information Anywhere suite, which includes the Afaria mobile management tool and Onebridge development environment and middleware products, to develop a solution for its field operations workers to use handhelds, instead of network-attached PCs to check their e-mail or update service tickets. The tools, deployed in late 2007, let Delta's field-service workers exchange data directly with the company's back-end servers, using Motorola mc35 Windows Mobile handhelds, says Rich Meurer, advisory engineer at Delta.
In a different project, Delta Air Lines added a mobile application for baggage tracking this year, using Motorola m9090 handhelds, which use a different version of Windows Mobile.
Where as iAnywhere's tools are geared toward developers who are writing specific applications from scratch, Vaultus - which is used by Genzyme - has developed a series of templates that an IT department can customize. Other mobile dleware providers take different approaches: for example, Vettro specialized in putting hosted applications on mobile phones, and Syclo is focused on manufacturing apps.
Genzyme decided to choose Vaultus as the way forward when it decided to bring its
European sales representatives online. The company was already using the BlackBerry and was looking to them to provide its sales representatives in Europe with e-mail. Executives decided to make Genzyme's customer relationship management system (Sage Sa leslogix by Sage Software) available on the devices as well, says Seppo Beumers, application manager at Genzyme in Naarden, the Netherlands. The sales representatives typically work as field advisers. They need to make notes on questions and requests for follow-up and then put those into a CRM system. But they typically don't have enough time with a doctor to use their
notebook computers.
While Vaultus says a typical installation takes between three and six weeks and costs from $20,000 (about Rs 8 lakh) to $200,000 (about Rs 80 lakh), it took Genzyme about 10 months to deploy the application. The company spent about half a million euros, including the cost of about 200 BlackBerrys. Beumers said the extra time was needed to translate documentation and training materials and find time to train the sales representatives.
The company got a return on its investment in about 18 months, based on time saved by sales representatives. Now Genzyme in Europe is looking at using Vaultus to add more applications to the mobile phones, probably starting with corporate reporting tools. "I'm thinking that these mobile devices will be more important than your laptop," says Genzyme's Beumers
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