NEW DELHI: Using one’s own device at work may pose a threat to company’s data, but Indian enterprises seem to be embracing the trend with as many as 80 per cent employees surveyed saying their companies allow them to bring their personal mobile phones and laptops to work.

According to a research by services provider BT, 80 per cent of the Indian employees surveyed said their employers permitted them to connect their personal devices to corporate network and use them for work.

The research is based on survey of more than 2,000 users and decision makers across 11 countries, including India.

Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) is a recent trend where employees bring personally-owned devices to work place and use them to access company resources like email, file servers, and databases.

However, there are concerns of data being breached. For example, when an employee loses his/her personal device used for accessing the company network, the confidential data stored on the phone could be accessed by third parties.

Those surveyed seemed well informed about the risks that BYOD presents as 89 per cent said “putting 24/7 access to corporate systems into the hands of an increasingly mobile workforce is now the main threat to IT security.”

The research added that “the adoption of BYOD brings to light new security issues.”

BT said IT decision makers now need to tackle a wider range of issues such as security concerns, increased data usage expenditure, potential threat to intellectual property and the cost of infrastructure for multiple devices, before introducing BYOD at the workplace.

The security concerns, in fact, may not be totally unfounded as 73 per cent of the IT respondents said they have experienced security breaches due to people bringing in unauthorised devices.

Meanwhile, the research also pointed out that 65 per cent of the employees feel that BYOD enables them to serve customers better.

In fact, 51 per cent of the employees said they felt “more efficient and productive” by using a personally-owed device for work.

Article source: http://economictimes.indiatimes.com//articleshow/13312985.cms
Feed Attribution: Google News “Bring Your Own Device”

GameStop launches bring-your-own-device cellular service

May 20, 2012

Well, no one saw this coming: GameStop has launched a cellular service in the form of an ATT MVNO (Mobile Virtual Network Operator). Customers will have to bring their own devices, capable of working on ATT’s bandwidth frequency, and will have pay-as-you-go plans from $5 to $55 upwards to choose from. Details are a little [...]

Read the full article →

GameStop Mobile launches as AT&T virtual carrier, gives us rare bring-your-own …

May 19, 2012

Here’s an expansion of mobile competition in the US that comes out of left field, even for us: GameStop as a cellular provider. GameStop Mobile, as it’s called, is that rare bird of an ATT-based MVNO that relies on a bring-your-own-device strategy. As long as your hardware works on ATT’s 850MHz and 1,900MHz bands and [...]

Read the full article →

IT embraces bring your own device in corporate deployment, despite risks

May 19, 2012

While the bring-your-own-device phenomenon in IT presents a fair amount of risk to enterprise security, most companies are warming up to the idea anyway. A Cisco-sponsored survey of 600 IT and business leaders found that 95 percent of their companies allow employee-owned devices on the corporate network. Of all companies surveyed, 36 percent support all [...]

Read the full article →

Consumerization trend creates IT worries, worker benefits

May 19, 2012

A Cisco-commissioned survey of 600 businesses found that 95% permit the use of employee-owned smartphones and tablets in the workplace. The survey also found that 76% of IT managers consider the consumerization-of-IT a positive for their companies because employees can be more productive and feel more satisfied with their jobs. Cisco’s study even put a [...]

Read the full article →

Dynamics CRM saves email-drowned utility

May 18, 2012

Australian Power and Gas has implemented Microsoft Dynamics CRM and other Microsoft software to handle a skyrocketing number of customer queries, but the company’s CIO has said that he won’t complete the ecosystem with Windows 8 tablets, as the iPad works just fine for a bring-your-own-device (BYOD) model. (Power lines image by Charles Haynes, CC [...]

Read the full article →

Cisco: Enterprises are Embracing BYOD

May 17, 2012

More enterprises are embracing the bring-your-own-device (BYOD) trend, with executives seeing significant benefits in employee productivity and satisfaction while acknowledging the security and support issues for IT staffs, according to a new survey from Cisco Systems. In its IBSG Horizon Study, released May 16, Cisco officials found that 95 percent of survey respondents said their [...]

Read the full article →

Amdocs Survey: Service Providers Predict Accelerated Demand for ‘Bring Your …

May 17, 2012

ST. LOUIS, May 16, 2012 /PRNewswire via COMTEX/ – Amdocs, the leading provider of customer experience systems and services, today announced the results of a global survey that explores the growing demand for “bring your own device” (BYOD) support from business customers and the system implications this has for service providers. The survey, conducted by [...]

Read the full article →

Sapphire Now: It’s a Mobile, Social, Cloudy, Collaborative World

May 16, 2012

The Sapphire Now conference kicked off Monday in Orlando, Fla., with 60,000 customers, partners and employees of SAP (NYSE: SAP) participating, either at the conference facility or watching it online. The first day of the event offered the usual lineup of celebrity speakers — corporate and otherwise — with Tour de France winner Lance Armstrong [...]

Read the full article →

Enterasys Networks First Vendor to Guarantee BYOD Solution Deployment

May 15, 2012

BYOD (Bring Your Own Device) to work is an undeniable trend affecting organizations of all sizes. Industry pundits anticipate 2 billion devices in use by 2015 with 75% of them used for both business and personal use. These devices and their apps have become foundational tools for today’s workforce and a major influence on the [...]

Read the full article →