Good Things Come to Those Who Don’t Wait
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Symantec
Mobility Survey Reveals That Good Things Come to Those Who
Don’t Wait
Innovators seeing higher revenue and profit growth, competitive advantages, positive brand impact and happier customers
Two distinct types of
organisations emerge from Symantec Corp’s. (Nasdaq: SYMC)
recent 2013 State of Mobility Survey – “innovators”
who readily embrace mobility and “traditionals” who are
reluctant to implement it. Eighty four percent of innovators
are moving ahead with mobility, motivated by business
drivers, and they are experiencing significant benefits.
Traditional organisations are implementing mobility more
slowly, largely in response to user demand, and are seeing
both fewer costs and benefits.
“Few issues command the attention of IT today like mobility,” said Francis deSouza, president, Products and Services, Symantec. “The difference in attitudes and results between the organisations that actively embrace mobility and those that are reluctant is significant. Organisations taking a proactive approach benefit much more than those that put it off until they eventually find themselves trying to catch up to the competition.”
The two groups perceive the benefits and risks of mobility differently. Among innovators, 66 percent say the benefits are worth the risks, while 74 percent of traditional businesses feel the risks are not worth it. This is reflected in the rate of mobility adoption, with 50 percent more employees using smartphones for business among innovators than among traditional organisations. More than half of innovators (55 percent) are also taking control of purchasing phones for employees, compared to 44 percent of traditionals.
When it comes to the innovators, company involvement doesn’t stop with purchasing the phones. They also more often have mobility policies, and they are twice as likely to use technology to enforce their policies (60 percent in the innovators as opposed to 33 percent among traditionals).
ANZ
Enterprise specific findings (snapshot)
• For ANZ
enterprises, 77% consider business drivers as an important
reason for mobile adoption (compared to 86% of global
innovators and 54% of traditionals); 71% felt user demand
was important (compared to 84% of global innovators and 59%
of traditionals)
• Only 42% of ANZ enterprises felt the
benefits of mobility outweighed the risks
• In ANZ
enterprises, 53% of employee phones were purchased by the
company
• 69% of ANZ enterprises are discussing
deploying private app stores
• 39% of ANZ enterprises
are using technology to implement policy to manage mobile
use, including adopting information protection tools
ANZ SMB specific findings (snapshot)
• While
the top driver for SMBs globally implementing mobility is
user demand (78% innovators, 46% traditionals), ANZ SMBs
considered financial savings to be more important (66%) than
business drivers (60%)
• Only 43% of ANZ SMBs felt the
benefits of mobility outweighed the risks
• In ANZ
SMBs, 61% of employee phones were purchased by the
company
• 52% of ANZ SMBs are discussing deploying
private app stores
• 30% of ANZ SMBs are using
technology to implement policy to manage mobile use,
including adopting information protection tools
Costs
and Benefits
With the innovators taking more
advantage of mobility, they are also seeing more costs
associated with it. In fact, they averaged twice as many
mobile incidents during the last year, such as lost devices
and data breaches, leading to consequences such as
regulatory fines and lost revenue. The innovators are also
experiencing far more benefits, in three key
areas:
• Increased productivity, speed and
agility
• Improvements in brand value, customer
happiness and overall competitiveness
• Happier
employees and improved recruiting and retention rates
Most importantly, however, the innovators are experiencing nearly 50 percent higher revenue growth than traditionals (44 percent vs. 30 percent). All things considered, businesses perceive net positive results with mobility.
Effective
Mobile Implementation
The survey results illustrate
the positive impact mobility can have on the business, with
the right preparation. The following guidelines can help
organisations make the most of their mobile deployment while
reducing risks:
• Being cautious about mobility is
okay. Being resistant is not. Start embracing it.
Organisations should take a proactive approach and carefully
plan an effective mobile implementation
strategy
• Start with the apps with greatest
productivity benefits for employees. One of the best
ways to get started with mobility is to implement mobile
apps that will have an immediate impact on the
business
• Learn from the innovators – get the
benefits while minimising the risks. The key is to be
aware of the risks associated with mobility such as
information loss, and to follow the example of the
innovators
Click to Tweet: Business drivers
motivate innovative companies to pursue mobility: http://bit.ly/159KR1F
Symantec’s
2013 State of Mobility Survey
Symantec’s 2013 State
of Mobility Survey represents the experiences of 3,236
businesses, from 29 countries. Respondents were the
individuals in charge of computing – either senior staff
in the case of enterprises, or often an employee with
technical aptitude among SMBs. Responses came from companies
with a range of five to more than 5,000 employees.
Resources
• Report: 2013 State of Mobility Survey
Results
• Blog Post: Early Adoption of Mobility Pays
Off
• SlideShare Presentation: 2013 State of
Mobility Global Results
• Infographic: 2013 State of Mobility
Survey
• Podcast: 2013 State of Mobility
Survey
• 2013 State of Mobility Survey Press
Kit
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