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Bringing
wireless e-mail to the masses
A
democratisation process urged; 350 million business and consumer
users will have wireless e-mail access by 2010 says Gartner
Egham,
UK Once the preserve of the business elite, wireless e-mail
is undergoing a democratisation process that will bring it to the
masses, according to Gartner.
Not only is wireless e-mail spreading ever-wider across the enterprise
but consumers will increasingly access their email on mobile devices.
There are currently fewer than 20 million business users of wireless
e-mail worldwide, representing just two percent of all e-mail accounts.
Analysts predict that the progressive availability of products and
services will allow 350 million business and consumer users access
to wireless e-mail by 2010, meaning that 20 percent of all e-mail
accounts will be wireless enabled. Gartner expects wireless email
to reach commodity status by 2012.
As consumer technologies continue to infiltrate the enterprise,
as a result of IT consumerisation, a growing number of employees
will have the ability to access corporate email and other applications
from personal devices. Meanwhile, a reverse-consumerisation trend
is creating a new demand for mobile email outside the enterprise
boundaries, from prosumers (professional consumers) and consumers.
Traditional business e-mail centric devices are transforming into
personal devices that span both professional and consumer life.
Over the next three years wireless e-mail will become increasingly
popular with both businesses and consumers, said Monica Basso,
research vice president at Gartner. Ms Basso said that growth in
the consumer market will be fuelled by the increasing availability
of wireless e-mail support both in devices and from service providers
as well as by improved usability. Corporate use will also rise as
enterprises come under increased pressure to provide real-time communications
for their expanding mobile workforce. By 2012, wireless e-mail
products will be fully interoperable, commoditised and have standard
features.
They will be shipping in larger volumes at greatly reduced prices.
A longer term trend that will accompany wireless e-mail adoption
is convergence. According to Ms Basso, many users are frustrated
with the volume of communications tools they have to deal with and
these technologies will eventually converge into a single, technology-transparent
and presence enabled messaging style. Convergence will happen
on the client side, hiding technology complexity from users and
allowing them to focus on messaging content. By 2017, wireless e-mail
will be fully integrated with other messaging tools into personal,
converged communications. Companies like Microsoft, IBM, Nokia and
RIM are already taking some steps in this direction, she said.
Whilst Gartner sees consumerisation of IT as the key trend influencing
the rise in popularity of wireless e-mail both inside and outside
of the enterprise, there are a number of other trends and drivers
influencing the phenomenon:
Changing market dynamics Simpler, easier to use and less-expensive
wireless email bundles are increasingly available to the consumer
and careful planning can also result in cost-effective enterprise
deployments.
Technology enhancements A wide array of new e-mail-centric
mobile devices, mobile service support for Exchange 2007 and the
growing range of white label platforms available for mobile operators
and service providers are all driving the adoption of wireless-e-mail.
Evolving needs of user organisations, business users and consumers
Balancing security and the manageability risk of wireless
e-mail against the rewards mobile workers afford enterprises is
a key challenge.
Emerging and expanding service requirements - Different workers
have different profiles and different technological needs. There
is no one-size fits all solution and increasingly a combination
of different wireless e-mail products is required.
The rise of the Digital Native New-generation IT users will
prefer web-based e-mail services to traditional corporate systems
and will prefer to access e-mail on their personal multimedia buddy
rather than an e-mail centric business devices
Gartner predicts that the increasing convergence of corporate and
consumer technologies is leaving many user organisations exposed
to increased security risks.
Today
wireless e-mail is spreading across the enterprise and if not supported
by the IT organisation, individuals will find their own ways to
access work e-mail on personal devices with significant security
implications, said Ms Basso. She advised organisations to
accept the consumerisation and commoditisation of mobility products
and evaluate the impact of wireless e-mail on the IT organisation,
investments and deployments when planning a wireless e-mail strategy.
Ms Basso also underlined the importance of evaluating employee preferences
and expectations in terms of devices, applications and services
when planning for wireless e-mail deployments and advised organisations
to provide a range of corporate options, as well as selective support
to personal devices or services.
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