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December 13th, 2007

Ten reasons to NOT use iPhone for company business

Posted by Russell Shaw @ 3:40 pm

Categories: Apple

Tags: Apple iPhone, Mobile, Battery, Apple Inc., Forrester Research Inc., Advertising & Promotion, Engineering, Sales Force Automation (SFA), Marketing, Enterprise Software

In Focus » See more posts on: iPhone

Forrester Research offers these 10 reasons why the Apple iPhone picture-6.jpg isn’t ready for enterprise IT support, and therefore use by your company:

  1. Doesn’t natively support push business email or over-the-air calendar sync. … The iPhone can sync with Microsoft’s Exchange and IBM’s Lotus Notes over IMAP and SMTP ports, but your server and security admins have to configure their infrastructure to do so or purchase a mobile gateway from Synchronica or Azaleos….
  2. Doesn’t accommodate third-party applications, including those internally developed. … This is a showstopper for companies with enterprise mobility initiatives that require line-of-business applications like mobile sales force automation or an industry-specific application like mobile claims…
  3. Doesn’t support securing data on the device through encryption. There is no way for a company to natively secure the data on an iPhone with file or disk encryption…
  4. Can’t be remotely locked or wiped in the event of a lost or stolen device. …there is no way for IT to lock a device if — scratch that, when — users call the help desk and explain that they left their non-password-protected iPhone behind in a taxi…
  5. Lacks a hard keypad that provides feedback, which isn’t ideal for rapid and accurate input. … Many respected journalists have come to the conclusion that ultimately the keyboard “is a nonissue,”
    but only after five days of use. In speaking with enterprise-class mobile device users on a daily basis, the vast majority have found that they need some form of tactile feedback from their QWERTY or numeric keyboards. …
  6. Has limited service provider support and its carrier lock-in inhibits flexibility. …To date, Apple has officially announced four exclusive carriers for France (Orange), Germany (T- Mobile), the UK (O2), and the United States (AT&T). Outside of these countries, the iPhone isn’t available yet…
  7. Comes with a premium price tag. …Sourcing analysts rely on corporatewide discounts when they place a bulk order with their carrier, but AT&T will not sell the iPhone to business accounts — only consumers. Because the iPhone is purchased directly by the user, there’s no taking advantage of the discount. Moreover, IT is stuck in an endless loop of reactively supporting the device, which limits the ability to provide best-in-class service….
  8. Is only the first generation. …even Apple enthusiasts admit that there are some weaknesses they’d like to see fixed in future generations, like making it easier to activate the device, improving the battery life and sound quality, and, most importantly, allowing it to connect to higher-speed networks (3G) …
  9. Lacks a removable battery, so when the battery kicks it, so does the device. Apple does not sell replacement batteries for the iPhone. So when the battery dies, so does worker productivity….
  10. Lacks case studies of firms that have deployed it enterprisewide. … There is one known large enterprise that supports iPhones companywide, and it is Apple itself. Beyond that, we haven’t heard of many enterprises that have embraced the iPhone as a corporate device. And, as tough as it is to admit, the most trusted advisors to IT operations professionals aren’t industry analysts, journalists, or even the vendors themselves; it’s your peers…

Russell Shaw is an enterprise computing journalist, analyst and author based in Portland, Oregon. See his full profile and disclosure of his industry affiliations.

  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 5 Talkback(s)
lame
Good question - who is paying for this "research" and why?

Secondly, all these can be relabeled to some degree as the same general complaints Corporate IT had about PCs instead of green screen dumb terminals.

Same answer applies - get used to it or get out of the way.... (Read the rest)
Posted by: Jim888 Posted on: 12/14/07 You are currently: Logged In as: a Guest  | Login | Terms of Use
Does any phone support Exchange out of the box?  StickyC | 12/13/07
Simply Yes  nmh | 12/14/07
I wonder who is paying for all this "analysis"  MarcB_z | 12/13/07
10 answers  lostarchitect | 12/13/07
lame  Jim888 | 12/14/07

What do you think?

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  • Orb Unlocks iphone and ipod Touch From itunes
    US Box Office Movies and TV Shows. Google Builds iPhone Interface For Picasa Photo Service InformationWeek - Manhasset,NY,USA By Antone Gonsalves Google this week launched an iPhone interface for the company's Picasa photo service. ...

    Trackback by iPhone news by iphonestory (iphone news) — December 14, 2007 @ 6:53 am

  • Orb Unlocks iPhone and iPod Touch From iTunes
    ZDNet Blogs - Forrester Research offers these 10 reasons why the Apple iPhone isn t ready for enterprise IT support, and therefore use by your company: Doesn t natively support push business email or over-the-air calend ar sync. The iPhone can sync with Read More.. iLounge - Grown men do not rave about Barbie toys. So take our enthusiasm for KIDdesigns Barbie Jam With Me Electronic Guitar ($40) as genuine: as originally noted and rated in our 2008 iPod + iPhone Buyers

    Trackback by Anonymous — December 17, 2007 @ 3:05 am

  • Ten reasons to NOT use iphone for company business
    Ten reasons to NOT use iphone for company business ZDNet - USA The iphone can sync with Microsoft's Exchange and IBM's Lotus Notes over IMAP and SMTP ports, but your server and security admins have to configure their ... source: http://blogs.zdnet.com/ip-telephony/?p=2868

    Trackback by Anonymous — December 21, 2007 @ 3:06 am

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