Workshop Project
Something ive been working on for a few months.
http://opinionatedbrit.blogspot.co.uk/p/garden.html
Monday, 20 October 2014
Tuesday, 17 June 2014
BYOD –What it means to the small
company
Why rather than how
Too many of us in the IT
sector, whether we come from the front line right through to the darkened halls of infrastructure, nothing draws more fear into the beating heart of techiedom
than the thought of other people’s equipment on our networks.
Although the thought of bringing a BYOD policy into force may for many of you already be in place or certainly being considered in your environment, but this shouldn’t bring the amount of terror that any other device on the network would bring.
Although the thought of bringing a BYOD policy into force may for many of you already be in place or certainly being considered in your environment, but this shouldn’t bring the amount of terror that any other device on the network would bring.
The secret to successful BYOD policy creation is to decide
how far you want to go, this can tickle the edge of allowing email access onto
smart phones, right through to “Sue from accounts wanting to use her IPad”.
Each of these brings their own issues certainly and we need not discuss each in
their own merit, but more to conceptualize why we should consider them in the
first place.
Of course there are pros and cons to both with many end
users being tired of basic office standard computer fare; businesses tightening
IT budgets and the users just wanted to work in a more modern less ridged
way. This does sound like a great way of
working with pros all round, yet the
naysayer’s will talk about network security ,
access control, viral outbreaks… the list could go on, but with many of today’s services now being
cloud based the opportunities for working are pushing us even closer to an
“office-less… office”
Before you investigate things such as application wrapping
many fine and some not so fine software vendors are able to service everything
you could ever need from all in packages such as Office 365 or Googledocs right
through to bespoke CRM systems like Salesforce.
Have well defined goals as to what you wish to achieve,
whether it’s reduced hardware overhead, flexible working or just plain peer
pressure; questions such as what additional added value does it bring to the
existing IT services and how can it integrate into the existing infrastructure
should be taken into your plan; at the very least the three most basic requirements are
·
Do we need it at all?
·
Can we use existing cloud based services?
·
How do we reduce risk a.k.a what do we do once
the person leaves or the device lost?
The risk is really not whether you should allow your users
to “Bring your own device…” but with a good thought out plan could be more a
case of“what’s taken so long.”
Martin Bailey
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