BARCELONA, Spain â" Googleâs Android, having become the most popular smartphone software among consumers, is set to gain traction with businesses as SAP and VMWare help iron out security kinks.
Software companies attending the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona last week were displaying solutions designed to prevent corporate data from being compromised when employees use their personal phones for work. Samsung Electronics, the biggest maker of Android phones, says reducing that risk would give it a chance to overtake Apple in the enterprise business.
âWe recognized that we need a new growth agenda for Samsung, which is going to enterprise,â said Bum-Coo Cho, who heads Suwon, South Korea-based Samsungâs enterprise business team. âSamsung will put a significant amount of effort into generating business from the enterprise sector.â
Android, released less than four years ago, has since vaulted past Nokiaâs Symbian and Appleâs iOS in popularity among consumers of smartphones and tablet computers. Yet many businesses are concerned about the security of its open-source software, leaving a market largely untapped by champions of the platform including Samsung, HTC Corp. and LG Electronics Co.
About 50 percent of tablets and 30 percent of all smartphones are already used for business purposes, SAP Chief Information Officer Oliver Bussmann said. In Barcelona, SAP unveiled a partnership with Samsung to make Android devices safer to use as corporate tools.
âI currently donât see anyone on the Android side whoâs as far advanced,â Bussmann said in an interview last week. âWhen I see that the number of security functions they have is already as high as Appleâs and growing further, I think they have a real shot at this.â
More companies are evaluating their corporate handset strategy that goes beyond Research in Motionâs BlackBerry and the iPhone. Siemens, Europeâs largest engineering company, is considering options for a comprehensive solution on how to integrate not only personal computers, but also devices like smartphones and tablets into the companyâs IT landscape, spokesman Wolfram Trost said.
âEmployees are coming to us with their private devices that they know from home and that they like to use, so weâre looking how we can make that happen,â he said. âItâs not always easy because security requirements need to be fulfilled.â
Android smartphones accounted for 50.9 percent of all smartphone sales to end users last quarter, up from 30.5 percent a year earlier, according to researcher Gartner Inc. Sales of iPhones also rose, while fewer people bought devices running Symbian or BlackBerry.
Enterprises are facing an increasingly technology-savvy staff and want to let employees use their own personal device for tasks like sending email, working on business presentations or accessing databases. That trend puts additional pressure on Waterloo, Ontario-based RIM, which has dominated the market for mobile business devices.
Still, a change may take longer. âThere is no way the IT manager of a large investment bank is going to allow you to have such a myriad devicesâ as those running the Android platform, said Shannon Cross, an analyst at Cross Research in Livingston, N.J. âIt seems like a nightmare to manage. Thatâs probably going to be a problem for the foreseeable future.â
The key to successfully bringing private devices into a corporate environment is separating the business from the private information thatâs on the phone, said Srinivas Krishnamurti, senior director of mobile solutions at VMWare, which specializes in virtualization of corporate IT.
VMWare is working with LG Electronics and Samsung to produce hardware that enables such differentiation and is in talks with three more Android manufacturers, he said in an interview. The software maker also is partnering with operators Telefonica in Europe and Verizon Wireless in the U.S. to enable separate billing of private and business calls.
âOne of the reasons why enterprises have not deployed Android in the enterprise is that a solution like this doesnât exist,â Krishnamurti said in Barcelona. âNow they say, you guys have addressed a lot of the problems that weâve had with Android. Now weâre actually going to deploy Android in the enterprise and feel safe and secure.â
11:00 AM
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