Showing posts with label sap mentors. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sap mentors. Show all posts

Mobile Expert Video Series: Graham Robinson

I always love catching up with SAP Mentor and Founder of Yelcho Systems Consulting, Graham Robinson.  This time I catch him in Brisbane, Australia at the Mastering Enterprise Mobility with SAP event where I am speaking on mobile strategies.  In this interview he shares his thoughts and advice on mobile application development.

Video Link: http://youtu.be/vHfin3FlBxU
*************************************************************
Kevin Benedict, Head Analyst for SMAC, Cognizant
Read The Future of Work
Follow me on Twitter @krbenedict
Join the Linkedin Group Strategic Enterprise Mobility
Full Disclosure: These are my personal opinions. No company is silly enough to claim them. I am a mobility and SMAC analyst, consultant and writer. I work with and have worked with many of the companies mentioned in my articles.

What I Learned About Mobility at SAPPHIRENOW 2011, Part 2

In an article that I wrote pre-SAPPHIRENOW 2011, I shared what I hoped to learn at the conference.  In this article I share what I did learn.  I have included the original list and added what I have since learned.

1.  I hope that SAP and Sybase will unveil ambitious, innovative and powerful mobile solutions at Sapphire 2011.  What I learned - SAP announced 19 mobile applications, three to be released in June.  I understood the three to be EAM (enterprise asset management), CRM Field Services and Retail Execution.  The 16 or so later this year will utilize the HTML5 container to be released in SUP 2.1 in September.

2.  I want to know how SAP is going to address mobility in the cloud.  What I learned - Sybase's 360 business manages over 1.5 billion text messages per day.  I also know there is a lot of work with the MNOs (mobile network operators) to run Afaria in the cloud.  I think there is more for me to learn here.  I think SAP is doing more than I learned about.

3.  I want to learn how SAP is going to integrate M2M (machine to machine) wireless communications.  What I learned - SAP's CO-CEO Jim Snabe mentioned "sensors" seven times in 24 hours when I was in the room with him.  He spoke about "sense and respond" and directly about M2M (machine to machine) kinds of sensors and their role.  In a later keynote session with a group of futurists, they communicated that embedded sensors, M2M and wireless chips will be one of the next big revolutions.

4.  I want to see if SAP/Sybase have figured out how to simplify their enterprise mobility message and guidance for companies. What I learned - See my mobility photos from Day 1.  SAP created a mobility campus with about 10 booths showing specific mobility topics.  This was a good move SAP, but where was the booth on how to develop a mobility strategy?  I worked with the SAP PCN (premier customer network) round tables to help them think through strategies, but what about all the other companies?  I believe the right technology exists today, but there is still so much confusion that companies are hesitant to buy.  There is need for more work to be done helping companies determine and develop their mobility strategies.

Mobile Expert Video Series: AMT-Sybex's Malachy Martin

Mobile expert and mobility veteran Malachy Martin shares his thoughts on mobile strategy and designing, developing, deploying and supporting complex mobile applications.





*************************************************************
Kevin Benedict, Independent Mobile and M2M Industry Analyst, SAP Mentor Volunteer
Follow me on Twitter @krbenedict
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.

SAP, Sybase and Syclo Enterprise Mobility Update

I had the opportunity to participate in a pre-SAPPHIRE briefing by SAP's Daniel Faulk and Syclo's Jon Schmidt yesterday on the topic of enterprise mobility.  I joined a handful of SAP Mentors and bloggers to learn more about their strategies and plans.  It was recorded and you can listen to it here

In this briefing Syclo's Jon Schmidt discusses their co-innovation partnership with SAP around SAP EAM and CRM, and SAP's Daniel Faulk talks about SAP's partnership strategies with Syclo, and product roadmaps for SUP and Afaria.

SAP Mentors John Appleby, Bluefin, Jon Reed with http://www.jonerp.com/, and myself ask a series of questions about SAP's, Sybase's and Syclo's mobility strategies.

Whitepapers of Note

The Business Benefits of Mobile Adoption with SAP Systems
ClickSoftware Mobility Suite and Sybase Mobility Solution
Networked Field Services

Webinars of Note

3 Critical Considerations for Embracing Mobile CRM
The Latest m-Business Trends and How the Onslaught of Mobile Devices Affects Development Strategies
The Future of Enterprise Mobility
The Real-Time Mobile Enterprise: The Benefits of Rapid, Easy Access
Redstone Arsenal’s (DOD/Chugach) 3 Maintenance Challenges Solved by Mobile


*************************************************************
Kevin Benedict, Independent Mobile and M2M Industry Analyst, SAP Mentor Volunteer
Follow me on Twitter @krbenedict
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.

Mastering SAP Technologies and Mobility in Australia

Geeks/SAP Mentors Migrating South
About ten SAP Mentors spoke at this year's Mastering SAP Technologies event in Sydney.  I presented one of the opening keynote presentations on Monday, and lead a session called Network Centric Operations in the SAP Environment this afternoon. 

It was a packed house, but there was a noted absence of any Sybase folks.  I met several companies currently interested in purchasing mobile solutions.  The strange thing is that Sybase has a sales office in Sydney, but still did not attend.  It seems there are still some coordination issues to work out.

There were 4 sessions that focused on enterprise mobility this year, and the Demo Jam winner was also a mobile solution.  The Demo Jam winners had the following components and features:
  • Remote controlled helicopter
  • Barcode scanner on the helicopter
  • Wireless remote control of the helicopter using an Android device
  • The barcode was capture and wirelessly integrated with SAP's SCM (supply chain management) system.
I attended a session today by Jason Lante from ETSA Utilities on mobile timesheets.  He shared how ETSA Utilities is successfully using ClickSoftware's ClickMobile and ClickSchedule integrated with SAP for about 75% of their employees that work in the field.  They have achieved their mobility and ROI goals and are looking to expand.

Kevin Benedict's Keynote...fun, fun!
I had a gathering of utility, post and CPG company representatives around me following both presentations that I gave.  I kept looking around for some SAP utilities or Sybase folks to bring into these conversations, but none were present.  I don't think the SAP field sales team quite knows how important mobility is becoming to their customers.



***************************************************
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.

Weird, Odd and Strange Mobility Series: Lonely Clusters, Bumping Dinner, Fountains and Penguins

iFLY Home Mobile App
You are lucky enough to have stumbled upon the first article in, I am sure, a long running series on strange and weird mobility news, information and other oddities.  Sorry.

Now for the weird, odd and strange:
  1. Scientists on Possession Island (1,000 KM off the coast of the Antarctic) have found that Penguins monitored with embedded RFID chips live longer than Penguins with leg bands.  Banded Penguins have a 16 percent lower survival rate, travel slower, have less babies, take longer to feed.
  2. Early tanks in WWI used pigeons to communicate their locations, logistics, inventories, status and pizza orders. 
  3. Just heard on a ScienceNow podcast - Meet and greet social gatherings don't work for lonely people. Lonely people tend to cluster together, and lonely people that cluster together just make each other lonelier.   Try Facebooking.
  4. Heard this quote from a person not licensed to practice medicine this morning, "IT is impotent in the face of mobility." 
  5. Read about a new mobile application that let's people share the cost of a restaurant dinner by "Bumping" money from one mobile device to another.
  6. SAP co-CEOs advice to politicians, "Business and political leaders should champion and enable further growth of mobile technology...there are 4.6 billion mobile telephones on the planet, and even the poor buy them."
  7. Have you read about the bathroom scales that will wirelessly tweet your weight.
  8. Forrester Research prediction - 2011 is the Year of the "Dumb" Smartphone User
  9. More Forrester Research predictions - Technologies like QR codes and augmented reality will prompt users to hold up their phones to interact with the world around them.
  10. Never walk while texting.  Woman falls into Mall fountain while texting.
  11. A 68 year old man punched a 15 year old boy on a Southwest Airlines flight from Las Vegas to Boise, Idaho, in December because the teen wouldn't turn off his cell phone
If you come across weird, odd or strange articles on mobility and mobile applications please submit them to me for inclusion.  My apologies again.

Whitepapers of Note:

 ***************************************************
Kevin Benedict, SAP Mentor, Mobile and M2M Industry Analyst
Phone +1 208-991-4410
Follow me on Twitter @krbenedict
Join the SAP Enterprise Mobility group on Linkedin:
http://www.linkedin.com/groups?about=&gid=2823585&trk=anet_ug_grppro

Full Disclosure: I am an independent mobility consultant, mobility analyst, writer and Web 2.0 marketing professional. I work with and have worked with many of the companies mentioned in my articles.

Enterprise Mobility 2011: An Analysis

Kevin Benedict's Perspective
on Enterprise Mobility 2011
I have been in enterprise mobility for over a decade now, and am beginning to feel like an elder statesman.  It's cold outside here in Boise, Idaho.  I've got a hot Starbucks mocha next to me, my warm slippers are on and my dogs are asleep at my feet.  It feels like a good time to exchange stories about deploying mobile solutions in distant lands, and sharing adventurous and humorous stories, but let's hold that to another time when we are face to face.  Today, let me share where I see enterprise mobility as of January 2011.

1) The mobility platform conversation is right.  The right topics are being discussed in the community.  The right problems are being solved.  The right kinds of technologies are being debated.  I have faith that the free market, competition and funding is available to deliver mobile platform improvements going forward.  I saw that Insight Ventures just put $19.1 million into mobile platform start-up Kony Solutions last week (read more).  The market finally appreciates the need for mobile platforms.  This is good for all of us.

2) Mobile application design, development and deployment systems are adequate for massive and disruptive adoption.  Apple's App Store celebrated their 10 billionth download last week.  Here is an excerpt from InformationWeek - The statistics for Apple's App Store are staggering. Apple claims that there are 160 million users of iOS devices. That means the average customer has downloaded about 62 applications. At the current rate, iOS users are downloading 206 apps every second, 12,360 per minute, 741,600 per hour, and 17.8 million apps per day.  We have great success models that are proven for marketing, selling and delivering mobile solutions.  These processes and solutions remove some of the biggest inefficiencies the enterprise mobility market has suffered from over the past decade.

3) Funding sources are interested and eager to invest in mobility and social media.  I have been reading a lot lately about the large amount of investments VCs and others are making in social media, and we all know that social media is benefiting from and growing in parallel to mobility.  These investments foretell many new innovations and new resources for us all.

4) Mobility experts and enterprises have accepted that companies must support all the major mobile devices and operating systems, and even their employees' personal smartphones and tablets.  This means having a good mobility platform and an MDM (mobile device management) solution in place are critical.  I remember a few years back when Sybase could barely sell Afaria because companies did not feel they needed MDM, but today it is mission critical.  This trend also makes Terry Stepien (president of Sybase/iAnywhere) and John Chen, president of Sybase look like geniuses for recognizing the value of mobile platforms and MDM early on.

5) Once a good mobile platform and an MDM are in place in the enterprise, the focus for mobility will change to the individual.  The individual position or role will need specific tools, mobile apps, access to backoffice systems and data to fulfill their specific roles and responsibilities.  The user becomes the center of the mobility universe and the ROI becomes role based.  How can this position or role best optimize their performance using mobile solutions?  What do they need?  IMPORTANT! This is the area where third party mobility vendors can really add value to the SAP or other ERP ecosystems.

6) Integrating location-based services (LBS) with everything.  In addition to marketing and retailing, any work that is performed in remote locations, on routes, involves delivering products or services to customers, or in mobile environments will benefit from LBS.  LBS is an area that will become more and more important to companies.  Geospatial information systems (GIS) and LBS provide valuable views and perspectives that are very difficult to achieve without.

7) There is a deserved emphasis by SAP and others on mobile business intelligence (BI).  The use of in memory computing for near real time business intelligence that can be shared with mobile devices in mobile environments can be revolutionary.  Combine a user centric mobile application approach with mobile BI and LBS, and I can image amazing productivity gains.  I am very excited to see the innovations that will be forthcoming from this area.

8) Context aware mobile solutions are only starting to be thought through but promise incredible productivity gains.  Imagine that your mobile application recognizes, based on your calendar and location, that you will be visiting a customer.  As a result of this recognition, the mobile application queries back office BI, CRM and other systems to provide you with a complete and updated profile of the customer.  All of this is done automatically because your mobile application understands the "context" of your actions and movements.

9) Mobile money, mobile payments, mobile banking and more.  I have already stopped carrying family photos in my wallet.  Why would I carry them when I have 1,400 family photos on my iPhone?  Why would I carry a Starbuck's card, when I can pay for my Mocha at Starbucks with my iPhone?  The same holds true for nearly all other purchases.  Yes, there are many security issues and privacy concerns that need to be resolved, but that is why we surround ourselves with smart people.  I have faith that these issues will be worked out.  Once they are worked out satisfactorily, I can imagine all kinds of mobile applications will benefit from the ability to manage business transactions on them.

10) One of the hardest tasks of business owners, supervisors and managers is to remotely manage work and workers.  Holding staff accountable and compliant to safety regulations, government regulations, legal requirements, customer SLAs (service level agreements), quality work, best practices and company policies is a huge challenge.  I believe there is an entire new category of mobile applications, workflows and media that can contribute to solving this challenge.

Notice of Whitepapers:

***************************************************
Kevin Benedict, SAP Mentor, Mobile and M2M Industry Analyst
Phone +1 208-991-4410
Follow me on Twitter @krbenedict
Join the SAP Enterprise Mobility group on Linkedin:
http://www.linkedin.com/groups?about=&gid=2823585&trk=anet_ug_grppro

Full Disclosure: I am an independent mobility consultant, mobility analyst, writer and Web 2.0 marketing professional. I work with and have worked with many of the companies mentioned in my articles.

Twitter and Tweet Convert - Kevin Benedict

Twitter Conversion
It's true.  I am but a recent convert to Twitter.  Since I typically write obnoxiously long articles, I had a difficult time understanding the value of a technology that limits itself to 140 characters.  I have now, however, seen the light and the light is an iPad app.

I use the iPad application Flipboard.  Flipboard and Paper.li are two applications that convert RSS feeds, tweets, Facebook and other content into online newspapers or magazines that are easy to read.  I am very impressed with Flipboard's ability to show the original tweet, and automatically open up the tiny URL link and display the content in the online newspaper format. 

I was simply too impatient to read through a list of tweets with enticing titles about world changing mobile technology, and not be able to see the content without waiting for the link to open in a browser and display the content.  In Flipboard it is a one step process.  All the tweet links are automatically opened and displayed in the newspaper.  BEAUTIFUL!

Mobile Retailing and NFC - Near Field Communications

The host of our CIO Council, Chris Albinson of Panorama Capital, today predicted that within one year mobile money will be on everyone's radar.  I asked for more details from several experts over dinner this evening and they predicted that iPhone 5 will have embedded NFC (near field communication) chips.  Google will announce mobile payment strategies, and so will other big players in the mobile money space like PayPal.  NFC are chips that can communicate personal data when they touch POS (point of sale) sensors.

What does this mean for enterprises in the retail space?  Who knows!  All I know is that everything from POS systems, to banking systems, EDI transactions and credit and debit card systems will be impacted.  Your smartphone will likely become your wallet.  The chip in the smartphone will uniquely identify you and provide you with the ability to pay for all kinds of things by just touching your smartphone to a counter top sensor.

Interviews with Kevin Benedict