TRENDING
If you want to get ahead
make sure you are the
first to do it; that’s the
message from a new
report from VMware that
looks into the emergence
of the digital workspace.
T
hose that move quickly when it comes to the Digital
Workspace, where workers have anytime, anywhere
access to any application on any device, will experience
business, operational and financial benefits. But those that
wait are falling behind, according to the VMware State of the
Digital Workspace report.
Survey respondents say game-changing IT depends on
organisations adopting a digital workspace that includes
security and identity management as vital components. With
realistic prospects of achieving triple-digit ROI, even surveyed
businesses that cite obstacles to adoption may want to
consider taking another look at business mobility initiatives.
Organisations understand they must rethink traditional
approaches to application delivery and management to stay
relevant in an increasingly digital world. A consumer-simple,
enterprise-secure digital workspace that unifies user, desktop,
and mobile device management to deliver business outcomes
can be the foundation for business mobility projects directly
linked to process change and innovation.
The 2015 VMware State of Business Mobility Report revealed
an important shift in the end-user computing market as the
value of creating more productive employees began giving
way to the larger value of making entire businesses more
competitive and successful.
Digital transformation is now an executive priority,
with more organisations recognising the power of
mobility to transform their businesses and the lack of
adoption as an impediment
At the core of that shift was an emphasis on how mobility
could transform business processes, helping an organisation
connect with customers, generate new revenue, and
streamline business operations. With data showing how
mobility was evolving-from individual productivity to
team productivity to true business process re-engineering,
representing mobility maturity, a clear gap existed between
what businesses had achieved and the potential that
remained ahead.
A chief challenge to meeting mobility objectives across
businesses, however, was a lack of unified technologies to
advance achievement.
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