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By: Freeform Dynamics Published: September 2007 |
Now that mobile email is moving into the mainstream, with technology
and services widely available to businesses of all sizes, organisations
looking to either invest for the first time or review their current
arrangements are presented with a range of approaches and options for
moving forward. But how do you make sense of these and figure out the
best option for your business?
KEY POINTS
Mobile email remains front and centre on wireless handhelds
While interest in mobile access to a range of corporate systems
such as CRM and ERP is steadily growing, messaging is still the primary
driver for investment in handheld technology for business
professionals, and according to 756 business and IT professionals
participating in a recent online study, it’s going to remain this way
for at least the next couple of years.
If your course isn’t yet set, you are likely to be faced with some decisions
The debate about whether email on the move is going to be an integral
part of business life into the future is now pretty much over. If you
are not yet convinced, you are probably in the minority. Some
organisations have already set their direction in this area in terms of
technology choices, but if you have yet to take the plunge, or need to
review an informal, limited or piecemeal capability that’s currently in
place, then decisions need to be made and it is you that this report is
designed to help.
Understanding the options and evaluating them objectively is critical
All mobile email solutions have one thing in common – they allow a user
to send and receive messages via a handheld device. Where they differ
significantly is in the way they do this, which in turn determines
which underlying mail servers and services they will work with
effectively, the experience delivered to the user, and the ease with
which they can be set up and administered. Solutions designed to work
with large scale Microsoft Exchange or Lotus Domino systems are not
necessarily going to help the large number of small businesses relying
on ISP hosted POP3 mailboxes, and vice versa. And from a user
perspective, solutions conceived for occasional low volume access will
be inadequate for road warriors, while fully comprehensive mailbox
mirroring and attachment handling may be overkill or difficult to cost
justify for relatively light requirements.
Check out the main players, but look beyond these too before making a decision
Research in Motion (RIM) is the current market leader with its
BlackBerry Enterprise Server middleware and the BlackBerry Internet
Service delivered through mobile operators. The challenger to the crown
is Microsoft, with its mobile email capability embedded natively into
Exchange. It is worth investigating other options, however, that
sometimes provide greater freedom in terms of device support and/or
systems integration. Mobile operator branded relay services and total
hosted email offerings with a mobile access option particularly address
the needs of smaller businesses, so there is nothing practical or
technical now standing in the way of any organisation moving forwards
with email on the move, regardless of its size and requirements.
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Published by: IT Analysis Communications Ltd.
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