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AstraZeneca exec says social collaboration tools need to work on tablets, smartphones
- Computerworld Staff (Computerworld (US)), 28 March, 2012 07:29
Executives at AstraZeneca, a global pharmaceutical
company, know that it's not enough to provide social collaboration tools
for their employees. Those tools need to be highly mobile.
Employees
are likely to be happy to get enterprise-level social collaboration
tools, but they are just as likely to be frustrated if those tools
aren't highly mobile, said Angela Yochem, chief technology officer at
AstraZeneca, which has 57,200 employees in the U.S., Europe and Asia.
Angela Yochem, chief technology officer at AstraZeneca.
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Enterprises are increasingly turning to social collaboration tools to get their employees working together and sharing resources and information. Companies are using enterprise-level versions of Facebook -like profiles and networks, instant messaging, videoconferencing and microblogging.
But
it's not enough to be social. Workers want to be social while they're
on the move, having these social tools working only a laptop isn't going
to cut it.
"Our job is to provide access to
information and resources as quickly and painlessly as we possibly can,"
Yochem said. "If that means providing communication access through
mobile devices of any sort, or Google TV, or a desktop or laptop, we want to be able to provide that. That's very important."
AstraZeneca uses Microsoft
SharePoint for collaboration and is in the midst of a pilot program
with Microsoft Lync, a unified communications software. Yochem said
3,400 AstraZeneca employees across 33 countries are participating in the
Lync pilot.
It's important to Yochem that Lync work on tablets and smartphones
, as well as on desktops and laptops. "We don't want to have to
restrict people for what works for them," she told Computerworld. "We
want to provide a sophisticated level of collaboration capability no
matter what they're using."
Tablets and smartphones have become are ubiquitous tools for the corporate workforce. Over the past year, the PC market has taken a beating from the burgeoning tablet market -- specifically the Apple iPad
. Earlier this month, research firm Gartner reported that worldwide PC
shipments are expected to remain weak throughout 2012. Part of that
sluggishness is because many consumers and enterprises are spending
their money on trendy tablets instead of on a new laptop.
Many
professionals who travel for work, and even those anchored in the
office, have their own smartphone, if not a smartphone issued by the
company.
People get attached to their mobile
devices, said Dan Olds, an analyst with The Gabriel Consulting Group.
They're going to be frustrated if they can't use enterprise social tools
on their favorite devices.
"It's critically
important that companies ensure their tools work on a range of business
and consumer devices," added Olds. "If they confine their tools to
desktops and laptops, they'll get a lot of user complaints and they
won't get as much participation as they hope ... Some employees,
particularly executives, are sort of spoiled when it comes to their
shiny new device. They don't understand, or don't want to understand,
why everything doesn't just automatically work on them."
Those executives are in a position to put a lot of pressure on IT to make sure they get what they want.
Zeus
Kerravala, an analyst with ZK Research, said younger workers are
especially attached to their smartphones and tablets and may balk at
using social tools on bigger computers.
"Tablets
and smartphones are the devices of choice for mobile workers,"
Kerravala said. "Making sure the tools work on their favorite devices is
very critical to attract younger workers ."
Olds
noted that companies can use a phased approach, rolling out social
tools for the desktop and laptop first, if need be. But that better be
just the beginning.
"They'd better plan on
providing support for tablets and smartphones sooner rather than later,"
he said. "And they need to tell users that this support is on the way."
Sharon
Gaudin covers the Internet and Web 2.0, emerging technologies, and
desktop and laptop chips for Computerworld. Follow Sharon on Twitter at @sgaudin , on Google+ or subscribe to Sharon's RSS feed . Her email address is sgaudin@computerworld.com .
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