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Mobilising Your Workforce: Nine Key Questions (Toebreaker March 2006) |
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| Mobilising your Workforce can have significant benefits
for most enterprises, hence needs to be considered very
carefully. Many believe that device selection is the
highest priority, however it is contended that you need
to start by understanding the requirements of your workforce
and your enterprises long-term mobile goals
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When Mobilising your workforce, device selection should
actually rank lower on the list of priorities than you
might think. It is tempting to start with the device,
because ultimately the success of your mobilization
project could hinge on how well you match your employees
with the right equipment. However before you begin evaluating
the latest PDAs, tablets and smartphones, you first
need to understand the varying requirements of your
different employee groups as well as your long term
enterprise mobility goals. Here are nine key questions that should be considered
before you begin the device selection process for your
enterprise.
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| Featured Solutions |
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| 1. |
Who are your user groups? |
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The needs of Mobile workers can
vary dramatically from one enterprise or division
to another, so breaking your enterprises mobile
workforce into logical groups is a sound first
step. This will allow device selections to be
tailored based on the needs of each group whilst
balancing IT infrastructure and financial considerations.
Examples of different user groups include: field
support or field service; field sales staff; transportation
and logistics; warehouse (both central and decentralized);
executive management; and office or campus based
mobile users (such as mobile case workers, healthcare
workers, security and rapid response personnel).
Once logical groupings are established, the needs
of each group can be more easily profiled. The
group's environment and how a mobile solution
can improve the productivity of the group, or
help solve the group's problems then becomes the
focal point. |
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| 2. |
What geographic areas do your user
groups cover? |
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While the word "mobility" often
suggests a wide range of locations, mobile workers
tend not to roam across vast areas. Typically,
the majority of mobile activity is conducted in
a well-defined region-within a one-hour drive
from the office, or in a specific city or multi-state
region. Geographic factors affect the connectivity
method. Systems such as cellular provide wide-area
coverage, but data coverage is not always available
outside major urban markets. For remote coverage
needs, satellite systems may be needed. And if
mobile users have access to fixed-line connections
wherever they go, traditional landline connectivity
via a modem may be a practical connectivity method,
given that these connections generally support
higher data rates than, for instance, cellular
data rates.
For users who simply need to be mobile within
the office or campus area-to improve the tracking
of inventory, for example-Wi-Fi connections are
a popular choice. These connections are also becoming
increasingly available to individuals traveling
in many urban locations around the country, from
coffee shops to airports. |
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| 3. |
In what type of environments will
the wireless devices be used? |
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The local environment in which
the worker uses the mobile tools can vary greatly.
Harsh environments that range from manufacturing
sites to construction or field sites will probably
require ruggedized or hardened devices. Enclosed
or underground locations, where no data connection
is possible, may need to store data offline, which
increases the device's required storage capacity.
Walking or driving affects both the connectivity
and the form factor of the device. Heavy usage
and complex applications require a lot of processing
power and battery life, so available electrical
sources and replaceable batteries need to be considered.
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| 4. |
How secure do your communications
need to be? |
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Different organizations require
different levels of security. Organizations that
require a high level of security will find that
higher end processors such as those provided in
Windows Mobile-compliant devices may be better
equipped for the job than lower-end phone-based
devices. Lower-end phones are restricted in the
level of security they can provide due to limitations
in the processing capabilities available. These
limitations preclude many phones from running
the algorithms that are necessary to support highly
secure applications. If adherence to standards
such as the federal security standard FIPS 140-2
is important, then lower-end phone based devices
will not be able to support this level of security.
Of course, phone-based devices may still be suitable-for
instance, if the user is simply scanning a piece
of information using a bar code scanner and sending
that back to a database, and not and accessing
personal, financial, or military data. |
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| 5. |
What applications would you like to
have in the field? |
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There are many different wireless
applications available. Some of them require devices
with specific technologies such as GPS or cellular
location-based services, which support directions,
routing, etc. Support for newer data collection
technologies such as RFID and more mature technologies
such as barcode reading also impact device selection.
When you need such applications, it is important
to note whether the functionality is integrated
into the device, or if the functionality is provided
peripherally. Adding too many external features
to a device will cause devices that started out
small and light to quickly become heavy and unwieldy.
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| 6. |
What type of data are you accessing
and entering? |
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Data access dictates screen size
and color considerations. The more complex the
data, the larger the screen size needed. For instance,
for a physician reviewing X-rays using a telemedicine
application, a tablet would be the most appropriate
device. Color is probably going to be of primary
importance to people making presentations or reading
complex charts or maps. The data entry requirements
of your users is going to determine whether an
external keyboard will be necessary or whether
pen-based or keypad input will suffice. You also
need to keep in mind that users are much more
likely to adopt applications if the user interface
is familiar to them and is easy-to-use. |
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| 7. |
Do you need to access and react to
data in real time? |
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Many mobile applications today
do not support true real-time data delivery. Instead,
they simply synchronize data with back-office
systems at the end of the day. While this may
be fine for some applications, it is not ideal
for others. For example, only with real-time data
delivery can you see that the salesperson in the
next territory just sold the last available replacement
part in the warehouse, enabling you to immediately
let another customer know that it's out of stock.
With sync, that information wouldn't be available
until the other salesperson got back to their
office. The need to support real-time data delivery
can affect device selection. Is more than one
type of capability required to support the real-time
resolution of problems from the field-for instance,
does the mobile user need voice capability as
well as e-mail? And if both of these capabilities
are combined in one device, can the mobile employee
use both capabilities simultaneously? |
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| 8. |
What are your long-term mobile goals?
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Long-term goals will have a significant
impact on your device selection process. You may
be starting out with a small mobility project
targeted at just some of your employees, for which
a single application needs to be provisioned with
a single type of device-a point solution. But
if you anticipate that your mobile needs will
expand in future years, you'll need to take a
platform approach by adopting a more flexible
and scalable architecture. Why would this have
an impact on your device selection? In point solutions,
many of the device selection decisions are made
for you. Point solutions often work on a limited
choice of devices, based on criteria that the
solution provider, rather than your organization,
determines. With a platform approach, you maintain
the flexibility to change devices as your needs
change or as technological advances bring new
and useful devices to market. Upgrade paths, flexibility,
and scalability are all features of your mobile
solution under a platform approach. This enables
organizations to deploy many wireless applications
and support many wireless devices while using
a single integrated architecture. As applications
are rolled out across time, an organization's
incremental cost of ownership decreases, instead
of increasing. Put simply, an organization's long-term
benefits are dramatically higher with the integrated
mobile platform approach. |
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| 9. |
What are your organization's financial
limitations? |
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The financial factors that determine
the total cost of ownership for a mobile device
are very similar to those for desktop-based devices.
Consider more than the initial device cost: what
are the costs for maintenance and support? You
must also consider how to navigate the trend toward
"convergent" devices and the impact this may have
on hardware upgrade cycles. Using the Swiss Army
knife approach may help reduce the number of devices
a worker needs, but it may have significant cost
implications. If, for example, one piece of the
converged device becomes outdated or obsolete,
you may be required to replace the whole device
to maintain the functionality that you need. |
Conclusion
Proper planning is the key to your mobilization success.
It needn't delay your rollout-in fact, it should save
you from making expensive and aggravating missteps.
Many of the above points are common sense. It's only
when they're missed or overlooked that they garner attention
(and not the kind you're looking for)! |
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