Besides messaging app BBM, BlackBerry has another potential crown jewel
in BES 10. The Mobile Device Management (MDM) system allows corporations
to control a fleet of smartphones. Because the enterprise requires more
from MDMs now than ever before, BlackBerry says that the Pure Play MDMs
are dying. The Canadian manufacturer says that capabilities like email
syncing and remote wiping of lost devices, are no longer good enough to
sell an MDM system to a corporation.
According to BlackBerry, today's MDMs need to include support for container applications (think Samsung KNOX), different handsets and operating systems, and make sure that core business processes used by mobile workers are secure. While BlackBerry admits that some pure MDM companies are trying to add on these new services, the company asks how secure you'd feel when having your company's smartphones managed by these late comers to the game.As BlackBerry points out, it has offered MDM since 1999 and counts numerous government agencies and organizations as customers. According to Joe McGarvey, Enterprise Content Strategist at BlackBerry (and the author of the post on BlackBerry's Business Blog), the company started at the high-end of mobile device security to "meet the security needs of any enterprise. Given their heritages in the low-end MDM space, rival vendors are now bolting on security and application management capabilities."
While announcing that BES will soon support Windows Phone, CEO John Chen said that while BES continues to make money for the company, it has been losing customers since the retirement of BlackBerry 7. This is one area of the company that definitely needs to show growth and we're sure that the CEO is working on it. After all, you don't want to tell the world how some of your competitors are disappearing, only to fall off the ends of the earth yourself.
According to BlackBerry, today's MDMs need to include support for container applications (think Samsung KNOX), different handsets and operating systems, and make sure that core business processes used by mobile workers are secure. While BlackBerry admits that some pure MDM companies are trying to add on these new services, the company asks how secure you'd feel when having your company's smartphones managed by these late comers to the game.As BlackBerry points out, it has offered MDM since 1999 and counts numerous government agencies and organizations as customers. According to Joe McGarvey, Enterprise Content Strategist at BlackBerry (and the author of the post on BlackBerry's Business Blog), the company started at the high-end of mobile device security to "meet the security needs of any enterprise. Given their heritages in the low-end MDM space, rival vendors are now bolting on security and application management capabilities."
"While
the surge of consumer-based mobile devices into the enterprise created
an urgent need for basic MDM, characterized by corporate email
synchronization and the ability to wipe a device of data in the event it
was lost or stolen, enterprises now require mobility solutions that go
well beyond basic MDM. These new requirements, which include
container-based application management, the secure exposure of core
business processes to mobile workers, application development and
support for multiple device types and operating systems, have prompted
multiple analyst firms and industry observers to declare the coming
obsolescence of pure-play MDM solutions."-Joe McGarvey, Enterprise Content Strategist, BlackBerry
While announcing that BES will soon support Windows Phone, CEO John Chen said that while BES continues to make money for the company, it has been losing customers since the retirement of BlackBerry 7. This is one area of the company that definitely needs to show growth and we're sure that the CEO is working on it. After all, you don't want to tell the world how some of your competitors are disappearing, only to fall off the ends of the earth yourself.
source: BlackBerry via BerryReview
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