Showing posts with label israel benjaminy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label israel benjaminy. Show all posts

Mobile Expert Interview Series: ClickSoftware's Israel Beniaminy, Part 4

ClickSoftware's Israel Beniaminy
This is Part 4 of my interview with ClickSoftware's VP of Product Strategy, Israel Beniaminy.  Also read Part 1, Part 2 and Part 3.

Kevin:  Where do you see mobility going in 2011?
Israel:  Judging by the evolution of mobility in 2010, mobility is going to continue surprising us in 2011.  It's going to be an exciting year!  Still, a few predictions are as safe as predictions can be:  Mobility will affect more people, in more roles, than ever before.  Many people will leave aside desktops and laptops, bypass netbooks and switch to using smartphones and tablets for the majority of their digital communications.  Social media will start to become a key part of enterprise mobility solutions (as it has done already in consumer mobility).  Mobile applications will be increasingly sensitive to context, starting with location and extending to other context cues; and location will receive a boost from existing and upcoming indoor-location technologies.  Lastly, while predicting surprises is impossible by definition, I would expect some of the most rewarding and significant surprises to be in discovering new ways of doing business, which will become possible due to mobile technology, just like the Internet enabled new ways of doing business (eBay is just one example).

Kevin:  What role do you see for mobile BI in Field Services?
Israel:  Executives, managers, business analysts and budget managers all need full access to business intelligence systems.  When drilling through the numbers, an iPad works very well. You don’t want to be doing much work on a small iPhone screen.  However, for field services engineers, they need access to BI data but not all the data.  It is best if the data is integrated with their existing field services solution.  Field services engineers don’t need to know about Business Objects on the back end, but they could benefit from their performance data.  The number of work orders completed relative to other service engineers.  The number of sales, the amount of inventory or services sold, etc.

For field services managers, it may be useful for them to see product sales numbers so they can anticipate demand on their services and plan for it.

I want to thank Israel for taking the time to share his thoughts, experiences and advice with all of us.

Whitepapers of Note:
***************************************************

Kevin Benedict, Independent Mobile and M2M Industry Analyst, SAP Mentor Volunteer
Follow me on Twitter @krbenedict
Join the SAP Enterprise Mobility Group on Linkedin
Read The Mobility News Weekly
Read The Mobile Retailing News Weekly
Read The Field Mobility News Weekly
Read The Mobile Money News Weekly
Read The M2M News Monthly

Full Disclosure: I am an independent mobility analyst, consultant and blogger. I work with and have worked with many of the companies mentioned in my articles.

Mobile Expert Interview Series: ClickSoftware's Israel Beniaminy, Part 3

ClickSoftware's Israel Beniaminy
This is Part 3 in this interview with ClickSoftware's VP of Product Strategy, Israel Beniaminy.   Read Part 1Part 2 and Part 4.

Kevin:  How are enterprise mobility implementations different from other typical IT projects?
Israel:  The good news is that unlike some other IT projects, ROI for mobility projects is usually easy to calculate and achieve.  More tasks per day, per field worker, shorter time-to-invoice, reduced work force required for paperwork, call center and dispatching are just a few examples.  The bad news - The users work in a highly dynamic environment, and it can be quite difficult to imagine all the situations in which the mobile application may be used.  This calls for careful planning and execution of testing, which must include testing in the field, not just within the office.

Kevin:  What do companies fail to plan for when implementing mobility?
Israel:  Allow me to defer to my colleague Gil Bouhnick who wrote a great article on this: "10 Common Mistakes to Avoid When Deploying a Mobile Management Solution", http://www.enterprisemobiletoday.com/features/management/article.php/3895436/10-Common-Mistakes-to-Avoid-When-Deploying-a-Mobile-Management-Solution.htm.

Kevin:  What advice do you have for companies just starting down an enterprise mobility path?
Israel: "Think big, start small."  Think carefully about the ultimate target, but build a road map of deployment phases, making sure that each phase delivers enough new value to each stakeholder. "Business first, technology second" – Your business requirements should dictate technology choice (sounds trivial, but it's too easy to lose sight of this).  Future-proof - Your business will change, and mobile technology will change, in ways that are difficult or impossible to predict.  Choose your strategy, architecture and processes to maximize your ability to easily adapt to these changes.

Kevin: How important is mobile device management and security?
Israel: The obvious answer is the right one.  They are very, very important.  Still, the specific circumstances determine exactly how this importance should influence your decisions.  If you choose to install native applications on the mobile device, device management can be highly challenging.  If you choose a zero-footprint solution, you can still achieve robustness (including operation even when out of coverage) and high functionality, and in that case the device management requirements are simpler (though they may still exist).  Same goes for security.  While nobody wants to lose lists of customers to a competitor, companies will differ about their threat magnitude and probability assessment, and will therefore differ on choice of an appropriate security solution.  While considering these, make sure to also consider a different but related subject, worker safety.  Can you find a mobile worker who has stopped moving and answering the phone?  Can you do that while respecting employee privacy?  Will the mobile application include a "panic button" to let workers get help?  What other things can you do to protect your mobile workers?

Kevin:  What should people know about your company and products?
Israel:  ClickSoftware is widely recognized as the leader in field service management solutions – ask analysts such as Gartner and partners such as SAP (who market our solutions under their own brand). We believe we have the potential to achieve a similar status in overall enterprise mobility.  We base this belief on our technology, partnerships and architecture, and above all on the extremely rapid growth in the number of our mobility customers.

Kevin:  What makes your company different from your competitors?
Israel:  In enterprise mobility, we work top down from business processes to technology.  It is not about synchronizing device data with back end server data, and it is not about enabling the user to bring up a form and edit its contents (though both of these are important parts of our solutions' functionality).  It is about making the whole interaction work as a business process, coordinating not just a mobile device with the back office, but also coordinating applications on multiple mobile devices (which may all belong to the same mobile worker or to different workers) with multiple applications at the back end, all done in real time.  It is about making the mobile application easily adapt itself, without any programmers necessary, to the ever changing needs of the organization.  To that end, we see ourselves as providers of both enterprise mobility applications and of a business mobility application framework.  Unlike some of our competitors who strive to also provide the mobility infrastructure, we rely on interchangeable mobility infrastructure on top of which we can deliver the business benefits.  This enabled us to be the first (as far as I know) company to deliver a complete business mobility platform on top of Sybase's technology mobility platform, and will enable us to continue our rapid innovation process in the future.

Stay tuned for Part 4 of this interview.

Whitepapers of Note:

***************************************************

Kevin Benedict, Independent Mobile and M2M Industry Analyst, SAP Mentor Volunteer
Follow me on Twitter @krbenedict
Join the SAP Enterprise Mobility Group on Linkedin
Read The Mobility News Weekly
Read The Mobile Retailing News Weekly
Read The Field Mobility News Weekly
Read The Mobile Money News Weekly
Read The M2M News Monthly
Full Disclosure: I am an independent mobility analyst, consultant and blogger. I work with and have worked with many of the companies mentioned in my articles.

Mobile Expert Interview Series: ClickSoftware's Israel Beniaminy, Part 2

ClickSoftware's Israel Beniaminy

This is Part 2 in this interview with ClickSoftware's VP of Product Strategy, Israel Beniaminy.  Also read Part 1, Part 3, and Part 4.

Kevin: What is different today, than when you started with enterprise mobility?
Israel: Just about everything.  I'll mention two major differences:  First, most or all barriers have disappeared.  When I started, mobile technology was expensive, complex and unreliable, and even when you could hide the complexity, justify the costs and work around the reliability issues, it was just too new and too rarely deployed to be considered by anybody except for the brave early adopters.  None of these barriers exist today.  Second, enterprise mobility used to rely on mobile technology that was developed specifically for business uses – consumers were unlikely to see any benefits worth the high costs.  Today, enterprise mobility is carried on a tsunami of consumer mobile technology.  This not only made the deployment much cheaper, it also made many professional workers ready to accept – and eagerly anticipate – mobile deployment, as long as software vendors such as my employer were ready to deliver the level of usability, friendliness and the "I can’t define it but I know it when I see it" sense of fun we expect from consumer mobility.

Kevin: What industries do you see adopting mobility today?
Israel: What industries don’t?  Field workers may seem like the immediate suspects, since they are indeed mobile in the strict meaning of that word.  Yet, even workers who spend their whole workday within the same four walls have a lot to benefit from mobility.  The health care and hospitality industries are just two examples of such industries which have discovered tremendous value in mobilizing their business processes.

Kevin: What business processes do you see companies mobilizing?
Israel: Some processes are mobilized in just about any industry:  Work management (tasks and shifts); time reporting; expense accounts; and various approval processes (e.g. vacation approval).  Other processes are industry specific, such as field service management in industries such as IT, telecommunications, consumer equipment, etc.; claims adjustment in insurance; quotes and billing in sales; inventory tracking; inspection and many more.

Kevin: What are some of the most surprising trends you saw in mobility in 2010?
Israel: The iPad surprised me twice:  Once when it became an instant success in consumer mobile devices, and again when it was so quickly adopted by enterprise workers.  A related trend that I found surprising is the growing number of organizations that allow workers to use their personal mobile devices in the enterprise work processes.  This trend overcame both the reluctance of some IT departments to control the device choice in order to deliver adequate support, security and functionality; and the technological challenge of developing process specific applications that work well on many different devices.  By the way, that technological challenge has too often been "solved" by developing weak and limited applications.  I believe that with standards such as HTML5, we can really meet the challenge without compromising on functionality, robustness and user experience.

Kevin: What are some of the biggest challenges you see in mobility today?
Israel: I'll refer to business mobility – the use of mobile technology in improving existing business processes and enabling totally new business processes.  In business mobility, I believe one major challenge is in understanding that mobilizing an application or a business process almost always requires a complete rethinking.  If you just take the same screens and actions and make them available on a mobile device, you're probably doing it wrong.  There are several reasons for that.  I'll mention three: focus, context, and specialization.

Focus:  Because a mobile worker is usually focusing on the task at hand and not on the mobile device, unlike the office worker who focuses on the screen to get the job done.

Context:  Because a mobile application needs to be sensitive to many cues – Is the user driving right now?  Is the user alone or with a customer? Is the user near enough to the location (of service or inspection, for example) in order to collect information? What communication bandwidth is currently available, if any? Each of these should make the application behave differently.

Specialization:  Often, an office user specializes in one kind of role and can deep-dive into one application for most of the work day.  A mobile worker will need to interact with many applications during the work day.  For example, while service engineers are on site, customers may ask them about billing, contracts, new products and so on.  If they have the right mobile applications, they can answer immediately instead of referring the customer to make multiple phone calls.  This both raises customer satisfaction and reduces call center load, but it can be challenging to design the mobile applications so that users can use them intuitively even if they don’t use some of these services often; and it is also challenging to make it all work together.  When switching from the field service screens to the billing functionality, we must preserve the context.  Otherwise, the service engineer will need to type in information again, such as the same customer name, which makes the system just about unusable.

Read Part 3 of this interview.

Whitepapers of Note:
***************************************************

Kevin Benedict, Independent Mobile and M2M Industry Analyst, SAP Mentor Volunteer
Follow me on Twitter @krbenedict
Join the SAP Enterprise Mobility Group on Linkedin
Read The Mobility News Weekly
Read The Mobile Retailing News Weekly
Read The Field Mobility News Weekly
Read The Mobile Money News Weekly
Read The M2M News Monthly

Full Disclosure: I am an independent mobility analyst, consultant and blogger. I work with and have worked with many of the companies mentioned in my articles.

Mobile Expert Interview Series: ClickSoftware's Israel Beniaminy, Part 1

ClickSoftware's Israel Beniaminy
I was able to catch up with ClickSoftware's VP of Product Strategy, Israel Beniaminy, today in unseasonably warm Petach Tikva, Israel this morning for an interview.

Note:  Israel responded in writing to my questions and then we followed up with a phone interview.

Kevin: What are your current roles and responsibilities? How long have you been in these roles?
Israel: I am Senior VP of Product Strategy at ClickSoftware. Informally, I describe this role as managing the process in which innovation ideas are created, gathered, researched, refined, selected and converted into concrete business plans. I have served in this and prior roles bridging between business and technology at ClickSoftware for the past eight years. Before that I served in more technical roles, and under pressure I will admit to still being a technologist at heart.


Kevin:  Where are you located?  How long have you been in that area?
Israel:  During most of my professional career I have been based in Israel, including my current location at ClickSoftware's Israeli office, in Petach Tikva (near Tel Aviv).


Kevin: What mobile device(s) do you carry?
Israel: This tends to change quite often.  Current snapshot:  Main workhorse is Lenovo X200 laptop – e-mail, research, development, writing, etc.  Blackberry Bold for voice and short e-mails; iPod Touch for music and reading e-books (the small size still makes for surprisingly convenient reading, and you can't beat its size and weight for portability).  iPad for Internet browsing, some more e-mail (is that a recurring theme?), reading e-books and some games.


Kevin: What are some of your favorite mobile applications that you have on your mobile device?
Israel: As a voracious reader, I love the e-book readers, switching between Kindle App, Stanza and iBooks according to the e-book type and source.  Apart from these, I have LinkedIn, Facebook and Twitter apps on all my mobile devices.  My favorite navigation app is Waze – it works well, has good traffic reports, and it is so impressive that they got all that via crowd sourcing.  Games come and go – one game I liked recently is Tower Madness.


Kevin: Do you ever use your mobile device to buy things?
Israel: Yes. Mostly e-books and applications.


Kevin: How many computing devices do you have in your home?
Israel: Depends on how you count.  My wife, son and daughter each have a desktop.  We also have a netbook but have been using it less since a lot of the things it can do are better on an iPad or iPod, or on my son's Motorola Milestone (Android mobile device).  We also have several iPod Touch devices, gaming machines – Wii, PSP, and soon to add a living-room media computer.


Kevin: How long have you been involved in enterprise mobility?
Israel: For at least a decade now.


Kevin: How did you get involved in enterprise mobility?
Israel: Working on field service solutions, it was very natural to think of how to communicate with the field service engineers.  I remember one customer of ours, a service organization, whose service engineers worked out of remote locations and didn’t start each day at the office.  I think it was around 1995, when mobile data was very expensive and not too reliable, so the solution they came up with was to send each technician a fax with the next day's scheduled tasks.  The technicians would report the task execution by filling in paper forms and faxing them back to the main office.  Combine this with the complete inability to know where your workers are during the day, and you must find yourself thinking: "there must be a better way!"  So we started out by integrating our scheduling and routing solutions with mobile solutions developed by partners, even when only a minority of field workforces were mobilized. Later, we saw that connecting to the field service management and scheduling system was a prime driver for mobilizing, and that mobility had to be tightly interwoven into the service task life cycle, so we developed our own mobility solutions.


Read Part 2 of this interview.
Read Part 3 of this interview.
Read Part 4 of this interview.

Whitepapers of Note:
***************************************************

Kevin Benedict, Independent Mobile and M2M Industry Analyst, SAP Mentor Volunteer
Follow me on Twitter @krbenedict
Join the SAP Enterprise Mobility Group on Linkedin
Read The Mobility News Weekly
Read The Mobile Retailing News Weekly
Read The Field Mobility News Weekly
Read The Mobile Money News Weekly
Read The M2M News Monthly

Full Disclosure: I am an independent mobility analyst, consultant and blogger. I work with and have worked with many of the companies mentioned in my articles.

Interviews with Kevin Benedict