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The Mobile Worker Movement

The Mobile Worker Movement "I want to use my mobile device at work!" Smartphones didn't gain traction in the enterprise until employees started bringing them to work. Now these and other consumer technologies are fueling the next wave of IT adoption. 1990 2010 Young, tech-savvy workers are a big part of this wave of ITadoption. They expect to be able to use their smartphones as an enterprise productivity tool. device sales Mobile are exploding Morgan Stanley predicts that global smartphone shipments will exceed personal computer shipments by 2012 . and that mobile e-commerce will account for 25% of U.S. online sales. Mobile workers noon night morning digg in Did you know ... And ... Knowledge workers use their smartphones Many mobile workers and the social networks will work non-traditional to build relationships work hours and locations and conduct business. if employers offer flexible work options return. 60% 31% An Intel® survey showed that 60% of respondents use a smartphone at work, and 31% would like to use one.? Mobile workers get more done. It's no longer necessary to squeeze all of minutes to the u e of 51 11 12 10 your work into an 8-hour day. 3 8 7 5 6. Mobile business computers continue to incorporate more and more consumer-based features while enabling workers to add 51 minutes back to their work day. Mobile workers are not just young workers. 61% of Gen Y and 50% of 30+ workers believe the technology tools they use in their personal/social life are more efficient and productive than those used in their work life. 61% 30+ Is it time to rethink your IT policies and join the mobile worker movement? Companies that 50% can adapt quickly to the new mobile landscape are more likely to thrive and prosper. Sources •'Forrester. "Increase Productivity by Providing Notebooks Beyond Road Warriors." Oct. 2008. •CSC. Douglas Neal, CSC Leading Edge Forum • Morgan Stanley. Internet Trends. 2010. •Unisys. Unisys Consumerization of IT Benchmark Study. 2010. •* Intel. "Consumerization: What is in Store for IT? Insights and Market Research." July 2010. •Gartner. "Gartner Predicts 2011: Network Capacity and Consumers Impact Mobile and Wireless Technologies." Dulaney, K., Redman, P., Milanesi, C., Baker, V. L., Basso, M., & Fiering, L. November 18, 2010. •Dell. "CIO strategies for consumerization: The future of enterprise mobile computing." Paul D'Arcy, 2011. | computers Smartphones the work The Mobile Worker Movement "I want to use my mobile device at work!" Smartphones didn't gain traction in the enterprise until employees started bringing them to work. Now these and other consumer technologies are fueling the next wave of IT adoption. 1990 2010 Young, tech-savvy workers are a big part of this wave of ITadoption. They expect to be able to use their smartphones as an enterprise productivity tool. device sales Mobile are exploding Morgan Stanley predicts that global smartphone shipments will exceed personal computer shipments by 2012 . and that mobile e-commerce will account for 25% of U.S. online sales. Mobile workers noon night morning digg in Did you know ... And ... Knowledge workers use their smartphones Many mobile workers and the social networks will work non-traditional to build relationships work hours and locations and conduct business. if employers offer flexible work options return. 60% 31% An Intel® survey showed that 60% of respondents use a smartphone at work, and 31% would like to use one.? Mobile workers get more done. It's no longer necessary to squeeze all of minutes to the u e of 51 11 12 10 your work into an 8-hour day. 3 8 7 5 6. Mobile business computers continue to incorporate more and more consumer-based features while enabling workers to add 51 minutes back to their work day. Mobile workers are not just young workers. 61% of Gen Y and 50% of 30+ workers believe the technology tools they use in their personal/social life are more efficient and productive than those used in their work life. 61% 30+ Is it time to rethink your IT policies and join the mobile worker movement? Companies that 50% can adapt quickly to the new mobile landscape are more likely to thrive and prosper. Sources •'Forrester. "Increase Productivity by Providing Notebooks Beyond Road Warriors." Oct. 2008. •CSC. Douglas Neal, CSC Leading Edge Forum • Morgan Stanley. Internet Trends. 2010. •Unisys. Unisys Consumerization of IT Benchmark Study. 2010. •* Intel. "Consumerization: What is in Store for IT? Insights and Market Research." July 2010. •Gartner. "Gartner Predicts 2011: Network Capacity and Consumers Impact Mobile and Wireless Technologies." Dulaney, K., Redman, P., Milanesi, C., Baker, V. L., Basso, M., & Fiering, L. November 18, 2010. •Dell. "CIO strategies for consumerization: The future of enterprise mobile computing." Paul D'Arcy, 2011. | computers Smartphones the work The Mobile Worker Movement "I want to use my mobile device at work!" Smartphones didn't gain traction in the enterprise until employees started bringing them to work. Now these and other consumer technologies are fueling the next wave of IT adoption. 1990 2010 Young, tech-savvy workers are a big part of this wave of ITadoption. They expect to be able to use their smartphones as an enterprise productivity tool. device sales Mobile are exploding Morgan Stanley predicts that global smartphone shipments will exceed personal computer shipments by 2012 . and that mobile e-commerce will account for 25% of U.S. online sales. Mobile workers noon night morning digg in Did you know ... And ... Knowledge workers use their smartphones Many mobile workers and the social networks will work non-traditional to build relationships work hours and locations and conduct business. if employers offer flexible work options return. 60% 31% An Intel® survey showed that 60% of respondents use a smartphone at work, and 31% would like to use one.? Mobile workers get more done. It's no longer necessary to squeeze all of minutes to the u e of 51 11 12 10 your work into an 8-hour day. 3 8 7 5 6. Mobile business computers continue to incorporate more and more consumer-based features while enabling workers to add 51 minutes back to their work day. Mobile workers are not just young workers. 61% of Gen Y and 50% of 30+ workers believe the technology tools they use in their personal/social life are more efficient and productive than those used in their work life. 61% 30+ Is it time to rethink your IT policies and join the mobile worker movement? Companies that 50% can adapt quickly to the new mobile landscape are more likely to thrive and prosper. Sources •'Forrester. "Increase Productivity by Providing Notebooks Beyond Road Warriors." Oct. 2008. •CSC. Douglas Neal, CSC Leading Edge Forum • Morgan Stanley. Internet Trends. 2010. •Unisys. Unisys Consumerization of IT Benchmark Study. 2010. •* Intel. "Consumerization: What is in Store for IT? Insights and Market Research." July 2010. •Gartner. "Gartner Predicts 2011: Network Capacity and Consumers Impact Mobile and Wireless Technologies." Dulaney, K., Redman, P., Milanesi, C., Baker, V. L., Basso, M., & Fiering, L. November 18, 2010. •Dell. "CIO strategies for consumerization: The future of enterprise mobile computing." Paul D'Arcy, 2011. | computers Smartphones the work The Mobile Worker Movement "I want to use my mobile device at work!" Smartphones didn't gain traction in the enterprise until employees started bringing them to work. Now these and other consumer technologies are fueling the next wave of IT adoption. 1990 2010 Young, tech-savvy workers are a big part of this wave of ITadoption. They expect to be able to use their smartphones as an enterprise productivity tool. device sales Mobile are exploding Morgan Stanley predicts that global smartphone shipments will exceed personal computer shipments by 2012 . and that mobile e-commerce will account for 25% of U.S. online sales. Mobile workers noon night morning digg in Did you know ... And ... Knowledge workers use their smartphones Many mobile workers and the social networks will work non-traditional to build relationships work hours and locations and conduct business. if employers offer flexible work options return. 60% 31% An Intel® survey showed that 60% of respondents use a smartphone at work, and 31% would like to use one.? Mobile workers get more done. It's no longer necessary to squeeze all of minutes to the u e of 51 11 12 10 your work into an 8-hour day. 3 8 7 5 6. Mobile business computers continue to incorporate more and more consumer-based features while enabling workers to add 51 minutes back to their work day. Mobile workers are not just young workers. 61% of Gen Y and 50% of 30+ workers believe the technology tools they use in their personal/social life are more efficient and productive than those used in their work life. 61% 30+ Is it time to rethink your IT policies and join the mobile worker movement? Companies that 50% can adapt quickly to the new mobile landscape are more likely to thrive and prosper. Sources •'Forrester. "Increase Productivity by Providing Notebooks Beyond Road Warriors." Oct. 2008. •CSC. Douglas Neal, CSC Leading Edge Forum • Morgan Stanley. Internet Trends. 2010. •Unisys. Unisys Consumerization of IT Benchmark Study. 2010. •* Intel. "Consumerization: What is in Store for IT? Insights and Market Research." July 2010. •Gartner. "Gartner Predicts 2011: Network Capacity and Consumers Impact Mobile and Wireless Technologies." Dulaney, K., Redman, P., Milanesi, C., Baker, V. L., Basso, M., & Fiering, L. November 18, 2010. •Dell. "CIO strategies for consumerization: The future of enterprise mobile computing." Paul D'Arcy, 2011. | computers Smartphones the work The Mobile Worker Movement "I want to use my mobile device at work!" Smartphones didn't gain traction in the enterprise until employees started bringing them to work. Now these and other consumer technologies are fueling the next wave of IT adoption. 1990 2010 Young, tech-savvy workers are a big part of this wave of ITadoption. They expect to be able to use their smartphones as an enterprise productivity tool. device sales Mobile are exploding Morgan Stanley predicts that global smartphone shipments will exceed personal computer shipments by 2012 . and that mobile e-commerce will account for 25% of U.S. online sales. Mobile workers noon night morning digg in Did you know ... And ... Knowledge workers use their smartphones Many mobile workers and the social networks will work non-traditional to build relationships work hours and locations and conduct business. if employers offer flexible work options return. 60% 31% An Intel® survey showed that 60% of respondents use a smartphone at work, and 31% would like to use one.? Mobile workers get more done. It's no longer necessary to squeeze all of minutes to the u e of 51 11 12 10 your work into an 8-hour day. 3 8 7 5 6. Mobile business computers continue to incorporate more and more consumer-based features while enabling workers to add 51 minutes back to their work day. Mobile workers are not just young workers. 61% of Gen Y and 50% of 30+ workers believe the technology tools they use in their personal/social life are more efficient and productive than those used in their work life. 61% 30+ Is it time to rethink your IT policies and join the mobile worker movement? Companies that 50% can adapt quickly to the new mobile landscape are more likely to thrive and prosper. Sources •'Forrester. "Increase Productivity by Providing Notebooks Beyond Road Warriors." Oct. 2008. •CSC. Douglas Neal, CSC Leading Edge Forum • Morgan Stanley. Internet Trends. 2010. •Unisys. Unisys Consumerization of IT Benchmark Study. 2010. •* Intel. "Consumerization: What is in Store for IT? Insights and Market Research." July 2010. •Gartner. "Gartner Predicts 2011: Network Capacity and Consumers Impact Mobile and Wireless Technologies." Dulaney, K., Redman, P., Milanesi, C., Baker, V. L., Basso, M., & Fiering, L. November 18, 2010. •Dell. "CIO strategies for consumerization: The future of enterprise mobile computing." Paul D'Arcy, 2011. | computers Smartphones the work The Mobile Worker Movement "I want to use my mobile device at work!" Smartphones didn't gain traction in the enterprise until employees started bringing them to work. Now these and other consumer technologies are fueling the next wave of IT adoption. 1990 2010 Young, tech-savvy workers are a big part of this wave of ITadoption. They expect to be able to use their smartphones as an enterprise productivity tool. device sales Mobile are exploding Morgan Stanley predicts that global smartphone shipments will exceed personal computer shipments by 2012 . and that mobile e-commerce will account for 25% of U.S. online sales. Mobile workers noon night morning digg in Did you know ... And ... Knowledge workers use their smartphones Many mobile workers and the social networks will work non-traditional to build relationships work hours and locations and conduct business. if employers offer flexible work options return. 60% 31% An Intel® survey showed that 60% of respondents use a smartphone at work, and 31% would like to use one.? Mobile workers get more done. It's no longer necessary to squeeze all of minutes to the u e of 51 11 12 10 your work into an 8-hour day. 3 8 7 5 6. Mobile business computers continue to incorporate more and more consumer-based features while enabling workers to add 51 minutes back to their work day. Mobile workers are not just young workers. 61% of Gen Y and 50% of 30+ workers believe the technology tools they use in their personal/social life are more efficient and productive than those used in their work life. 61% 30+ Is it time to rethink your IT policies and join the mobile worker movement? Companies that 50% can adapt quickly to the new mobile landscape are more likely to thrive and prosper. Sources •'Forrester. "Increase Productivity by Providing Notebooks Beyond Road Warriors." Oct. 2008. •CSC. Douglas Neal, CSC Leading Edge Forum • Morgan Stanley. Internet Trends. 2010. •Unisys. Unisys Consumerization of IT Benchmark Study. 2010. •* Intel. "Consumerization: What is in Store for IT? Insights and Market Research." July 2010. •Gartner. "Gartner Predicts 2011: Network Capacity and Consumers Impact Mobile and Wireless Technologies." Dulaney, K., Redman, P., Milanesi, C., Baker, V. L., Basso, M., & Fiering, L. November 18, 2010. •Dell. "CIO strategies for consumerization: The future of enterprise mobile computing." Paul D'Arcy, 2011. | computers Smartphones the work

The Mobile Worker Movement

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Mobile consumer devices make it easier for employees to choose when and where to get their work done — and those conveniences can lead to higher productivity.Employees want to use their personal mob...

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