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Case Studies

BYOD habits

by Mark Rowe

European-wide mobile usage research released has cast light over what is claimed to be the worrying disconnect between IT priorities and the reality of mobile user habits, bringing with it security implications. The report from a mobile security product company found 73 per cent of UK businesses admit to having no formal BYOD (bring-your-own-device) corporate policy and support structure.

Despite business users requesting basic secure mobile functions, these requests are low on the list of IT priorities, leading users to seek their own โ€˜unregulatedโ€™ solutions.

Paul Steiner, Managing Director, Europe, Middle East and Africa at Accellion, said: โ€œDespite months of headlines related to the NSA PRISM program, businesses are operating a laissez faire approach to the security of their data in the cloud. Dealing with the whirlwind pace of mobile innovation is not just a security challenge for IT, it demands board-level scrutiny. Employees are now savvy enough technologically to seek out their own solutions, but then businesses must deal with the fallout when these solutions cause security breaches.โ€

UK users list the ability to share and access files while on the move in their top three demands of mobile working. As such, it’s no wonder they are turning to unrestrictedconsumer apps, as only 53 per cent of companies currently offer this functionality on work devices. Other issues in the research include:

ยท One-third of companies surveyed fail to provide an approved secure file sharing service to employees
ยท One-quarter permit users to find and use their own tools
ยท 22 per cent of UK businesses actually encourage users to use ad-hoc solutions such as Dropbox despite the known security risks
ยท 40 per cent of UK companies allow mobile users to use public cloud services, although 26 per cent allow use for only non-sensitive documents.

Across the rest of Europe, IT is even further behind, with 75 per cent of European companies using consumer grade file-sharing tools for work, as opposed to 46 per cent in the UK.

The UK is also leading the way in mobile deployment across Europe, with more mobile devices deployed per organisation and more support for employee-owned devices. In the UK, 17 per cent of workers have three or more mobile devices for work use. Only 22 percent of UK businesses do not support mobile devices, compared to 35 per cent of European companies.

Employees, keen to embrace mobile working, are driving this trend, which is increasing worker productivity:
ยท 50 per cent of employees in Europe are working an extra two hours a day on mobile devices, with
ยท 13 per cent in UK working four or more hours a day

However, it appears this extra time is not being used effectively, as:
ยท 35 per cent of UK IT departments do not support mobile creation and editing of documents
ยท 45 per cent offer no collaboration tools for on the move employees who prefer mobile devices

Finally, the survey found that 59 per cent of business users would be influenced in future job decisions by whether or not the employer provides mobile business tools. Asthese demands rise for flexible mobile working solutions, IT is set for an even greater challenge โ€“ to support a digitally flexible and mobile organisation. Visit http://www.accellion.com

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