Unisys is looking to make it easier for businesses to support the growing
number of mobile consumer devices being used by today's tech-savvy workers.
Increasingly, employees are bringing to work a host of mobile wireless
devices, such as smartphones, that are not issued by the company, raising concerns
over security, support and costs.
Unisys Sept. 30 introduced its End-User Productivity Services, a family of
outsourcing services designed to support a variety of devices, PCs and
applications using cloud capabilities the company already offers.
"You've got the younger generation that want to bring their own devices
to work," Tony Doye, president of Unisys Global Outsourcing and
Infrastructure Services, said in an interview, noting the growing security
concern for CIOs. "You've also got a blurring around what's work and
what's play, who is using what devices, etc."
The challenge comes in the various generations of employees in the
workplace—from Baby Boomers to Gen Xers to Millennials—and the need to support
them all, said Sam Gross, vice president of Global IT Outsourcing Solutions at
Unisys.
"The Millennials are going to bring in their devices to the
workplace," Gross said.
Analyst company Forrester Research said earlier in September that
smartphones make workers more productive, putting the onus on IT departments to
find out how to port more applications to these devices and to support these
devices.
In an interview in May, Forrester analyst Benjamin Gray noted that this new
generation of employees is creating
new challenges for IT departments, fueling the drive to employ such
technologies as desktop virtualization.
"In a couple of years from now, it's going to be a lot less about the
old computer box that IT hands out [to employees] and more about the image that
IT is handing out to you," Gray said at the time.
Gross agreed, saying the days of businesses locking into a long-term
agreement with an OEM to supply all the company's computing needs are coming to
an end.
"That thinking is no longer relevant because the demographics of the
work force are changing," Gross said.
Technologies such as Microsoft's System Center Configuration Manager and
Intel's vPro—both key components of Unisys' End-User Productivity Services—are
making it easier for businesses to manage a variety of mobile devices.
The new Unisys services offer not only traditional desktop support, including
service desk support, desktop management and applications, but also hosting and
virtualization services that use the Internet and Unisys
Secure Cloud Solution, which was introduced in June.
Services include Virtual Office as a Service, which gives users access to
standard office suites through a subscription to the Unisys secure cloud, and
Unified Communications as a Service, which again makes use of the vendor's
secure cloud to deliver Microsoft Exchange, Office SharePoint Server and Office
Communicator applications in a multitenant environment.
There also are Application Virtualization Services—for preparing and
deploying desktop applications in a virtualized environment—and Virtual Desktop
Services for monitoring and managing virtual desktops.
Unisys plans to offer a portal for managing stipends given to employees to
buy the devices they want to use for work, as well as client-side
virtualization to enable vendors to manage individual virtual desktops that are
on user devices.
The stipend-managing service could grow in importance as more businesses are
giving their employees money to buy computing devices.