Adoption of BYOD devices in enterprises grows 60% in EMEA

News Wireless Europe 22 MEI 2012
Adoption of BYOD devices in enterprises grows 60% in EMEA
While organisations are taking considerable steps towards BYOD adoption, network and bandwidth issues remain significant barriers for many in EMEA region, according to a study by Aruba Networks. About 69 percent of organisations allow some form of BYOD, whether that is strictly limited to internet connectivity or includes some access to corporate applications on employee-owned devices. This reflects a shift from the blanket ban on consumer-grade devices that has been witnessed in previous years. However, just 22 percent of organisations polled have more than one in four employees bringing their own devices, suggesting that there is still a long way to go before the potential of BYOD is fully realised. Increased mobile market fragmentation has had on IT administrators, who must now cater to a plethora of different manufacturers and operating systems. Apple was the smartphone and tablet manufacturer of preference for 88 percent and 86 percent of respondents respectively. Samsung was not far behind with 67 percent and 51 percent respectively preferring Samsung smartphones and tablets. A third of respondents said their organisations still ban employees from connecting their own devices to corporate networks. About 70 percent of organisations surveyed found that ensuring a secure connection is the main barrier to full adoption of BYOD, while 45 percent of organisations surveyed are held back by how to enforce access rights based on user, device and application type. In addition to the security issues that companies face, there is the issue of providing network resources to support the influx of multimedia-rich devices. This was the case for 35 percent of respondents, who claimed that providing enough mobile coverage and capacity for BYOD was a primary technical challenge. This strain on the network has led many enterprises to seek a well-planned mobility strategy with underlying technology that is able to satisfy the demands of employees – with almost two thirds of respondents planning to increase their investment in wireless during the coming year.

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