Mobile cloud computing applications may soon transform the management of IT for cost-conscious businesses, a report from AMI-Partners suggests.
Mobile cloud applications are set to make deep inroads into the
small and midsize business market, according to a cloud
computing research report from IT research firm AMI-Partners. The
research suggested that the expansion of mobile cloud (the use of
mobile applications hosted by third-party providers) is being driven by
the rapid growth in the number and utility of cloud applications, and
by the cost savings and relative ease of use they offer. Above and
beyond application provider revenues, telcos are expected to generate
additional mobile data-driven revenues as well, the report concluded.
The AMI report found key applications used included mobile cloud CRM
(customer relationship management), used by SMB sales staff to impact
sales, improve time management and better communicate via their
smartphones. The firm reported more widely, SMBs benefit from mobile
cloud e-mail (for example, BlackBerry), which is usually more dynamic than
non-hosted Internet e-mail systems and frequently less costly on a TCO (total
cost of ownership) basis. SMBs are also making investments in
enabling mobile access to their internal databases, inventory and
related information, the report found, indicative of a broader need to
have access to key data on the go.
"This offers a channel-driven play for hosters to tap into SMBs'
willingness to undertake expenditures to develop mobile capabilities,"
the report noted. "While enabling mobile access to SAAS [software-as-a-service] applications
already in use is a given, innovative business applications that allow
SMBs to bypass physical infrastructure and yet operate in a highly
collaborative manner will continue driving the utility of cloud
mobility."
Which applications SMBs prefer to bundle, their price sensitivity and
purchase channel preferences are further explored in AMI's upcoming
Worldwide SMB Cloud Services Study. The study provides coverage of
platforms and devices; IT infrastructure services, business
productivity applications, business management/line of business
applications and Unified Communications (UC). AMI said the research
would be available later in 2010.
"Cloud services generally, and mobile cloud in particular, have
immediate value for SMBs," said Karen Nielsen, senior consultant and
telecom analyst for AMI-Partners. "This is especially true for those
businesses with a mobile or remote work force aiming to reduce software
expenses."
Nielsen said among medium businesses, 84 percent have a mobile
work force, while 39 percent (more than one million businesses) of small
businesses have a mobile work force. "Moreover, smartphone
penetration is 77 percent among MBs and 31 percent, and growing, among
SBs," she said. "This implies the end market for mobile cloud is
adequately saturated with devices able to run mobile cloud applications
and reap the benefits of hosted mobile services."
Nathan Eddy is Associate Editor, Midmarket, at eWEEK.com. Before joining eWEEK.com, Nate was a writer with ChannelWeb and he served as an editor at FierceMarkets. He is a graduate of the Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern University.