LinuxWorld

Consumerization of small business IT

Different decisions needed than for enterprises.

During the Altiris user conference in April, I watched a lunch panel discuss the "consumerization of IT" and whether that's a good thing. My initial thought was that it was probably bad for enterprises that want to control everything, but may be good for smaller businesses.

Two Network World contributors were on the panel, Linda Musthaler and Tom Henderson. Linda wrote about the enterprise IT issues here, but I want to talk about how small businesses deal with the consumerization of IT, or more broadly, if consumer technology helps or hurts small businesses.

On one hand, small business and consumer technology have a huge degree of overlap. Home computer gear works quite well for small businesses, and many small businesses start in the owner's home. Standard home computers work fine for general business functions, and both XP Home and Vista Home do well with workgroup networks, but not enterprise networks where they choke on the network authentication requirements.

Enterprises worry about users demanding iPhones which require back-end restructuring to get access to corporate e-mail and company-built applications, although companies are catching up. Small businesses may not allow employees to choose an iPhone for different reasons, such as cost or the need to use “click to talk” functions popularized by Nextel.

Big companies hate employees using public Instant Messaging tools like AOL and Yahoo Messenger because they aren't secure. Small companies love them because they allow instant connections, and they worry less about security. Perhaps they should worry more, but actually, only idiot vice presidents at big companies use IM to discuss confidential matters. Judgment: Consumer tech is fine.

Aberdeen Analyst Michael Dortch, a friend from when he wrote for technical magazines way back, was also on the panel and pointed out that 70% of critical corporate data can be accessed by people who shouldn't have that authority. That makes the ubiquitous USB drive in many employee pockets a viable security threat and corporate espionage tool.

React: Give us your thoughts on the issues here.
Use this form to start a public discussion with other Linux World users on this article.
Log In | Register for an account (Why you should)

Note: Register to have your user name appear; otherwise your comment will show up as "Anonymous."

*Anonymous comments will only appear once they are approved by the moderator.

Newsletter sign-up

Sign up for one of Network World's newsletters compliments of Linux World

Linux & Open Source News Alert
Web Applications Alert
Video & Podcast Alert
Security: Threat  Alert
Virtualization Alert

Email Address: