According to data from Frost & Sullivan study, smartphones get more preferences in implementing the concept of BYOD ("bring your device") than tablet computers. In particular, service their employees smartphones supplying almost 71% of the companies surveyed, and tablets - only 47% of respondents. Utilities laptops employees receive 74% . Banking and financial institutions, insurance companies - those who use smart for official purposes. Tablets also now used primarily in the production, although there are attempts to introduce them to the warehousing, logistics, and medicine.
The study's authors argue that by 2016 tablets will make a breakthrough in the corporate sector, based on the growing number of applications, implying more or less data-intensive. 56% of companies will use tablet , and some will lose their smartphones - from 66% to 58%. Personnel structure on the base of mobility in the coming years will not change much: 62% of employees work in the office at stationary locations, mobile workers will account for 22% and the remaining 16% are remote employees who can work from home .
The percentage of companies that allow employees to bring their mobile devices to work in corporate systems is 65%. True, 53% of respondents admit that they know how to deal with this case, data leaks and hacker attacks, and about half admit the idea that service unit employees in the last 12 months could be attacked at least once.