Thursday, June 23, 2011

Facebook Focuses on HTML5 in 2011 - Good for Social Media - Not Good for the Enterprise

In the blog on Forbes, “Facebook: Our Focus in 2011 Is On Mobile, HTML5” (link at the end of this blog), it is easy to see why mobility is not only a focus for Facebook, but also for practically every business. However, what is good for Facebook, other social media companies, publications, and gaming companies is not likely the best thing for your company – except for similar functions like connecting and communicating with your customers and community. Mobile is the fastest growing part of Facebook’s network and mobile users are twice as active as desktop users. These are market realities in the consumer market.  Some meaningful questions for business users are “Is mobility relevant to our business?”, “If mobility is important in our business, do we face similar challenges as Facebook?”, and “If our challenges are not the same, is HTML5 worth the investment today?”  With almost 2 decades of enterprise technology experience under practically every environment and major tech segment, I believe that mobility today is almost certainly relevant to your company, as it delivers cost savings, improved productivity/efficiency, and various controls and risk mitigation – exactly that which enterprise technology should provide to one extent or another.

Where the confusion starts and understanding of requirements often breakdown is in understanding the challenges. Facebook is a) a social media provider and b) spending millions (maybe 10s of millions) of dollars to evaluate *if* HTML5 will be the answer to their problems. So, if you are a social media company looking for a mobile platform, you can probably stop reading here.  The needs of “enterprise” apps is very different. To quote the blogger, Oliver Chiang, quoting Bret Taylor, CTO of Facebook, “… Apple and Google could do more to ‘close the gap’ between what a native application on their respective smartphones can do and what an HTML5 app on those devices can do. One example is Apple allowing HTML5 apps to also access the accelerometer (which allows for motion and directional input) on the iPhone.”  My first reaction is, “Yes, there is a gap.” My second reaction, “What motivation do Apple and Google have for abandoning the capabilities of their respective OS in delivering their users an exceptional experience – let alone abandoning in part or in total the revenue streams and appeal of app stores?”  Regardless, HTML5 is not proven as a viable alternative for most business processes, is still in its infancy in the consumer market (making it a good bit further away from being ready for the enterprise), and help doesn’t seem likely from the device and OS camps.

The nuggets I took away reinforce the strategy we see among our customers leading the charge in enterprise mobility.
  1. Enterprise Platform, Not Just a Mobile Platform: Anyone who has ever had to work with a web form or manage employees in the field, knows that lost time, lost data, and limited access to data cost money and kill customer service and productivity. Mobile web is rarely even a consideration. Even an app built on web services can fail to meet enterprise requirements.
  2. Right Device for the Job: Yes, we love the power and capabilities of iPhone, Android phones, and their tablet siblings, but try to process hundreds of barcodes or RFID tagged items on these devices and you’ll likely be looking for a job at Facebook.  Enterprise mobility is about converting some operation or process into software or delivering software and capabilities to support operations or processes. If you've done your job in selecting a Mobile Enterprise Application Platform (MEAP) that will support today and in the future the devices/OS appropriate to the task, then you can take advantage of all the native power and glory of the leading mobile platforms and device manufacturers. There is no one-size fits all mobile solution – and you wouldn't want it that way. That is the way it was prior to iPhone, Android phones, and the reemergence of the tablet! Different great devices one of the main reasons that mobility is exploding globally. Different jobs require specialized tools.
  3. AppStore Revenue Share is Not a Factor: You can argue that iOS (Apple) limits what a developer can do in building an application and accessing certain capabilities of those devices, but, hey, that is Apple’s business – sell and support great hardware (and primarily to consumers), often with their own tools (for which they charge money). Facebook, gaming companies, publications, and other mobile app companies pay 30% of their revenue to the AppStore. Folks – this is a BIG motivator driving Facebook's investment in trying to break free of the AppStore with a web-based app (HTML5). The enterprise is under no such obligation.  Yes, there are a variety of different financial considerations that would inform your purchasing decision, but a revenue share is not one of them. Again, if your enterprise mobile app is not required to be deployed to thousands (even 10s or 100s of thousands) of users on different devices that you do not own, manage, or control, then you are completely free to evaluate capabilities of mobile web vs native app head to head on their own merits.
There is a lot of confusion in the mobile space today, especially the mobile enterprise space, but don’t avoid investing in a quality mobile enterprise application platform and quality mobile apps. If you are early in your mobile deployments the MVP (mobile value proposition) is so compelling that you simply can’t wait. It is costing your organization hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of dollars annually while you wait for the rapidly changing mobile market to settle down. The average ROI among our customers is less than 6 months.  A hosted solution can provide immediate ROI. Yes, you will be asked to support Windows Mobile, iOS, Android, BlackBerry, etc. in your environment. And the list will change and grow with Windows Phone, Symbian, WebOS, and who knows what over the next several years. But will you be asked to deploy the same app across every platform? In most cases, the answer is, No.  The guys in the warehouse or doing deliveries are likely doing very different functions with very different needs than your sales and service team. The guys maintaining your fleet require something very different from your records management staff. So “build once, deploy to many” is partly an enterprise myth.   Yes, there is a cost of maintaining the same app for 2 platforms (e.g. Windows Mobile and iOS), but it is miniscule compared to a) the cost savings and other benefits of mobilizing your workforce and b) the overall cost of mobile initiatives. And if you've selected a capable mobile app platform, such as PointSync, the management will be that much less.

No one knows your business better than you. Have us help you put together for your business a Return on Investment (ROI) and Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) calculation. If you haven’t yet been burned by the endless hours spent developing, supporting, modifying, and testing the data synchronization of your mobile solutions, please don’t’ start digging that hole before you talk to us and have us help you build your use case for a true mobile enterprise application platform and apps.  You, your mobile workers, and your CFO will all thank you. And if you have been burned, we’ll show you a way to salvage your situation in the most timely and cost-effective way possible.  If Facebook figures it all out, believe that they (and others) will announce it to the world and you’ll be happy that they *and not you* invested in HTML5 to attempt to meet your enterprise needs.


posted by David Cohen
CEO @ MobileDatatForce

Joining Forces: Partnering with PointSync™

Partnering in business is imperative to any company’s success.  When companies effectively combine their assets and capabilities together, they can create synergistic solutions to address internal business challenges and external customer’s needs. That's why partnering is a key strategy at PointSync.

Early in 2011, we started building a new PointSync Channel Program.  This program enables Resellers and Independent Sales Reps to introduce and sell exciting mobile solutions and technologies to their new and existing customers.  This includes the PointSync Mobility Platform, which has been used since 2005 to deploy thousands of mobile workers into the field.  Now, this platform is broadly available to any company globally wishing to develop mobile business applications.

So why partner with PointSync to start selling mobile solutions?  Here's a few great reasons: 
  • Mobile solutions represent one of the hottest technology markets with projected growth years into the future.
  • PointSync has over a decade of experience in delivering mobile solutions and technologies that help thousands of users automate the data collection and reporting process.
  • Just for partners, we're building a new content portal to offer 24/7 access to training, tools, documents, videos and other collateral needed to be successful. (see sample below)
  • Dedicated account management resource to provide support.
  • Our PointSync product team is dedicated to keeping the product lineup updated based on current industry standards.  (We've updated it twice already in 2011!)
  • We value the relationships we have with our partners and will respond quickly to requests for information and other inquiries.

Mobile business solutions are complex, often requiring disparate technologies to seamlessly connect to ensure it can successfully perform the business function required.  By partnering with PointSync, you're teaming with a company who has been focused solely on mobility since 2000 and understands where the challenges exist and how to solve them.

Whether you're a business owner, developer or entrepreneur, we'd love to talk to you about how we can work together.  Call or email our Channel Manager, Lori Uria for more information.

Phone:  208-854-7994
Email:  Click HERE

Thursday, June 9, 2011

3 Reasons We Need Rugged Android Devices

For many of our customers who have incorporated a mobile solution into their business operations, robust and rugged handheld devices are an absolute must.  They need devices that can be drop-kicked across a warehouse floor, resist water sprayed directly on them or are completely sealed from dust, oil and other contaminants.  Companies like PSION | Teklogix, Intermec, Motorola (formerly Symbol) and DataLogic are industry leaders in this technology field and have such devices available if you're willing to shell out $1000 or more per unit.

While these devices are stellar in their ability to take a licking, they all continue to run on the aging Windows Mobile operating system. As a partner with some of these manufactures, we know they're considering releasing Android-base devices. We'd like to see them move quickly and get them to market...and here are three reasons why:
Soon Please...
  1. The writing is on the wall!  The industry has changed at a frighteningly fast pace.  In the last three years, Android and iPhone devices have overtaken the market by reinventing how mobile devices work.  Windows Mobile remains entrenched in a usage model that was valid in the middle of the last decade.  In 2011, the stylus is no longer an option...devices are finger-driven.
  2. Windows Mobile smartphones have all but vanished.  If a mobile app is designed for a person doing deliveries on a rugged device running Windows Mobile, an account manager who also uses the app for account and inventory lookups will need a Windows Mobile device as well.  Finding a small, inexpensive Windows Mobile smartphone is now very difficult, making it hard to build the app once and have it transition easily between different types of mobile workers and devices.
  3. Deploy now, fill the holes later.  While Windows Mobile may be a more enterprise-ready operating system due to a longer history in the market, that has not stopped executives, managers and other employees from using their Android and iPhone devices for business purposes.  The cycle has always been to push the technology into the enterprise, figure out where the holes are, then build ways to fix those issues.  How about this?  Let's push to get Android into enterprise scenarios now, then resolve the sync and management issues with products like PointSync Professional!
As software developers, we hedge our bets on the most widely accepted platforms. Right now, Android owns the biggest share of the mobile platform war. According to industry studies, Android will grow to own 50% of the market by 2012!  In the near future, we'd like to see the same app we write for an account executive packing a Droid Pro also work on a high-end rugged device. Who will step to the plate first?  Whoever it is, we hope it happens soon.

Tim Cerami
Information Architect @ MobileDataForce