A lire sur: http://www.techrepublic.com/blog/mac/how-to-avoid-the-biggest-mistakes-when-deploying-ipads/1995?tag=nl.e008
April 4, 2012, 11:50 AM PDT
Takeaway: Erik Eckel points explains how you can avoid the most common mistakes of iPad deployments in your organization.
Consumer Reports settled any disputes this week when it named
Apple’s new iPad the best tablet computer. The iPad is popular, people
are buying them, and they are increasingly being used within small
businesses, mid-sized organizations, and large enterprises.
However, that doesn’t mean tablet deployments are working perfectly.
In fact, organizations are repeatedly making some of the same mistakes,
according to the Wall Street Journal.
WSJ’s top five mistakes
The Wall Street Journal notes that several errors are common
to organizations deploying tablet computers. Firms fail to develop
effective plans before deployment. Some fail to understand the roles
tablets fulfill well. Others believe required applications will prove
readily available. Many miscalculate the cost of tablets versus laptops.
Some misjudge the ease with which tablets can be supported and secured.
These mistakes are easily avoided. Organizations need only perform a
little homework before placing orders and deploying new iPads or
tablets.
Have a plan
Companies need to have a plan for tablets. Will only executives
receive tablets, or do sales personnel receive them, too? Will the
tablets replace laptops in the field, or are tablets going to prove
complementary to traditional notebooks? Will the IT department support
the tablets or are users on their own? Ultimately, what’s the tablet’s
purpose: increase revenue, reduce costs, or enable more efficient
production?
Know how tablets will be used
Companies need to review how new tablet computers are going to be
used. Is their purpose to provide remote connectivity? Will they be used
by field technicians? Are they merely going to provide email and
Internet support to mobile staff? Before tablets are purchased,
organizations should know how users will be using the devices, what
tasks the tablets will be used to fulfill, and how the tablets are going
to add efficiencies and generate revenue.
Know the applications you’ll use
Don’t assume the apps users require are readily available. Don’t
assume users can just load an RDP client and connect to desktops or
terminal servers remotely. Tablet displays may prove too small for
terminal services navigation or use. Form a testing team, if even
briefly, and purchase a few units to test in the field. Confirm apps are
available and programs work as required and enable staff to perform the
tasks the tablets are intended to fulfill. The time to realize tablets
don’t fit the bill is during proof-of-concept testing, not after you’ve
purchased dozens or even hundreds.
Understand the costs
Sure, firms can purchase entry-level iPad 2s for $399 or iPad 3s for
$499. Models with additional storage and network connectivity, however,
cost more. 64GB Wi-Fi and 4G-enabled models push $830. And when mobile
staff must have cellular data service, recurring monthly costs must be
factored in. Over the course of a one- or two-year lifecycle, tablet
expenses can easily exceed the costs for business-class laptop
computers. Thus, companies must ensure they budget properly and include
recurring monthly cellular data costs when budgeting tablet deployments.
Know how to support, secure tablets
Prepare the help desk to support iPads and tablets. Ticket queues
will clog, technicians will become frustrated, and end users will lose
patience if you don’t. Ensure help desk staff members have the
documentation for common issues (how to configure Exchange accounts, how
to troubleshoot Internet connectivity, how the organization intends
staff to purchase and install applications, how to connect to the
corporate network via an official VPN, which users qualify for remote
access, etc.) and how machines will be remotely wiped should they become
lost or stolen. Also determine your security requirements in advance
and how they should be met; for example, will users be required to leave
sensitive information on the corporate network, thereby leaving the
tablets more secure. Establish other security procedures such as
passcodes that must be entered for access.
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