Storage Daily
Security Daily
Networking Daily
FREE NEWSLETTERS
search
 

follow us on Twitter


internet.commerce
Be a Commerce Partner















internet.com
IT
Developer
Internet News
Small Business
Personal Technology

Search internet.com
Advertise
Corporate Info
Newsletters
Tech Jobs
E-mail Offers


Related Articles
Dell OEMs Juniper Wares
Cisco Router Update Delivers Big Performance Boost
5 Signs You're Managing Your Linux Servers the Wrong Way

Networking Products
 Admin Report Kit for Windows Enterprise (ARKWE) (Vyapin Software Systems Pvt Ltd.,)
 WireCAD (Holbrook Enterprises, Inc. dba WireCAD)
 Kapten NG (Kapsys)
 Depositfiles Filemanager (Depositfiles.com)
 Right Web Monitor Pro (RightSoft)
 iSurfer Shield (Giant Matrix)
» Enterprise IT Planet » Networking » Networking Features

Bring-Your-Own-PC an Option for Cash-Strapped Enterprises

By Rob Enderle
October 29, 2009

Email Print Digg This Add to del.icio.us

During the past several weeks I've been looking at PC sales numbers and the corporate market appears to be in a tailspin. While the vendors seem hopeful that IT will come roaring back next year, I'm not seeing budgets being set this year that will allow that to happen.

Right now IT has too much to do and too little money to do it with. New PCs just don't seem to be a priority.

At the same time I'm watching Apple's release of its most business compatible version of its OS yet. I've been surprised at the massive number of Apple boxes showing up in corporations that, due to how they're purchased, aren't showing up in Gartner or IDC reports.

I think this means we are seeing a change in the way personal computers for business are purchased, at least in North America. And IT (because of budget constraints) is increasingly allowing this to happen. Clearly not in all shops, but in enough that it is driving a much healthier consumer market. It's also creating new business opportunities and potential problems that should be addressed.

The Shift to Personal Purchase

PCs in the past three decades have dropped from nearly $4,000 in 1980 dollars to under $500 in 2009 dollars. When inflation is factored in, a PC today costs a small fraction what a PC cost when corporations first started buying them for employees.

In fact, if you think about it, they are in line with the cost of some business Smartphones.

At the same time, IT has been overwhelmed with the pains of managing these things. They have to hire for help desks, manage software images, handle repairs, and staff for infrequent hardware deployments.

Over time, an increasing number of companies have shifted desktop applications targeting HR, sales, governance, and data entry back to Web-based centralized services that don't require a client. With a declining number of exceptions, the only desktop application set that still consistently on the desktop is Office.

Employees, who at one time drove upgrade cycles, now are more likely to try to prevent them so their workspace isn't disrupted. Big Bang, or all at once, deployments are exceedingly rare and with P&L responsibility drifting to the operating groups, purchase authorization has drifted there as well. And the operating groups have, for the last 5 or so years, not put a high priority on new PCs except for new employees.

Employees, particularly executives and younger employees, when they needed a new PC simply bought one (generally a laptop). They used existing polices that provided for system access from a home PC to enable them for work. For those working from home, many have used their own PCs for years.

In addition, with the massive number of layoffs people have increasingly had to buy their own PCs while looking for a job — and when rehired, appear willing to go on using it.

The cost savings is about $300 per employee per month that flows right to the bottom line at a time when profits are elusive for many companies. You can understand why neither the IT organization nor the line organizations that would have to fund a replacement program are eager to fix this.

Opportunities

This potentially opens the door for a number of service and configuration opportunities to surround this growing concept of employee PC ownership. The first would be a standard virtual machine on which a corporate image could be placed and maintained. This would allow the employee to buy a new machine, run a configuration utility supplied by the seller or OEM, and then download the protected and managed image from the corporation (which then could be remotely deleted upon employee termination).

Read the rest at Datamation

Follow Enterprise IT Planet on Twitter

Email Print Digg This Add to del.icio.us

Networking Features Archives


Latest Forum Thread
     Enterpriseitplanet Forum
Topic By Replies Updated
Wireless lan hardware for school davetrainor 3 2-10-2010 06:47 AM
Beginner seeking help with network design - namely switches darrenlight85 2 1-29-2010 01:18 AM
Enterprise Networking problem with 802.11n PMitchell 1 1-12-2010 03:55 PM
redirecting Skype output speech to TCP socket and receiving in other app johnyjj2 1 12-10-2009 08:35 AM
DNS Issue with test network davis 9 12-9-2009 02:53 PM




The Network for Technology Professionals

Search:

About Internet.com

Legal Notices, Licensing, Permissions, Privacy Policy.
Advertise | Newsletters | E-mail Offers