My YouTube Video Channel on Enterprise Mobility

I checked my YouTube channelhttp://www.youtube.com/user/kevinrbenedict/videos, this morning and there are now 245 video interviews with mobility experts published there.  Did you know you can subscribe and be notified each time a new interview with a mobility expert is uploaded?  Among those interviewed are dozens from SAP, many mobile platform and MDM vendors, industry analysts and yours truly pontificating about mobile strategies.

I like to encourage you to enjoy yourself while watching these, but if that is not possible, at least grab some popcorn.
*************************************************************
Kevin Benedict, Head Analyst for Social, Mobile, Analytics and Cloud (SMAC) Cognizant
View Linkedin Profile

Read the whitepaper on mobile, social, analytics and cloud strategies Don't Get SMACked
Learn about mobile strategies at MobileEnterpriseStrategies.com
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.

Predicting the Future of Enterprise Mobility

Figure 1 - Smartphones as
Internet of Things Hubs
How many advertisements for automobiles today promote the fact their cars are horseless carriages?  None! Why?  It is an assumption that your automobile will be horseless.  The same is happening today with mobile apps.  Who would develop a work order management or scheduling system today that does not support mobile?  Who would create business intelligence dashboards for executives that were not mobile?

Today it is a mobile first world.  Our first considerations for software app designs are:
  • What mobile devices will be used?
  • How do I integrate wirelessly with my back-end data sources and systems?
  • What onboard and remote sensors can I integrate into the app?
  • How do I secure it?
If all software apps are soon to be mobile, where will we find the next wave of innovation beyond traditional mobile apps and enterprise mobility platforms?  I believe it will come from sensors and integrating the physical world with the digital.

I have been working in the field of enterprise mobility for the past 13 years.  Early on there were very few sensors in mobile devices.  The sensors were the humans users, bluetooth add-ons, and barcode and RFID scanners.  Today, however, there are many built-in sensors in each of our smartphones and thousands of different kinds of data collection sensors available through the Internet of Things.

Let's ponder how our mobile apps are going to start interacting more with the physical world.  Sensors in parking lots can already notify us of available parking spaces.  Buildings can quickly report their own needs and status with embedded structural sensors that monitor vibration levels, energy consumption, security and more.  Your cars can wirelessly report their location, status and maintenance needs directly to your smartphone.  In urban areas sound sensors can lead you to quiet areas or noisy areas.  Traffic sensors can help you find the least congested routes.  Opt-in GPS tracking can help you navigate and meet up with friends and family members.  Weather sensors report the exact conditions at millions of locations.  Integrated with predictive analytics, you can anticipate weather conditions for the next week.  Using mobile banking apps, NFC, ATM sensors and POS sensors, you can be notified any and every time there is a transaction on your account - what was purchased, where and for how much.

Your smartphone is changing from a simple communication device, media center and personal digital assistance, to a hub between the physical and digital world.  That development opens up all kinds of interesting opportunities to ponder.  It is on the very edge of digital transformation where the integration between the physical and the digital happens where the next wave of innovation lies (see figure 1).

In the future software developers will become more and more like geographers and intelligence analyst as they increasingly work with real-world data.  They will be blending geospatial data, live remote sensor data and process data to create and understand relationships about where things are, how they are connected and what that data means to the success of the mission or plan.  This information will all be available on a smartphone and tablet near you.
*************************************************************
Kevin Benedict, Head Analyst for Social, Mobile, Analytics and Cloud (SMAC) Cognizant
View Linkedin Profile

Read the whitepaper on mobile, social, analytics and cloud strategies Don't Get SMACked
Learn about mobile strategies at MobileEnterpriseStrategies.com
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.

Mobile Strategies Top 55 Articles

For those of you who are employed, and perhaps actually have a family and social life, you will have purposely avoided reading many of the articles I have written over the past 24 months.  That is to be celebrated!  However, some of the articles you missed may actually be worth a read so I have compiled a list of the top 55.  Enjoy!

The Best of Mobile Strategies:
  1. Thoughts on Mobile Strategies and Social Collaboration
  2. Time-Space Compression
  3. Speed, Mobility and Online Sales
  4. Connecting the Strategic to the Tactical - Enterprise Mobility
  5. Mobility, Business Transformation and the 5th Dimension
  6. Infonomics and Enterprise Mobility
  7. M2M, Enterprise Mobility and Healthcare
  8. M2M and Enterprise Mobility - The Convergence
  9. M2M, SAP and Enterprise Mobility
  10. SAP's Mobility Vision - Any Way You Want It
  11. SAP's Sanjay Poonen Discusses Mobile Strategies with Kevin Benedict
  12. Learning about the Real World of Enterprise Mobility in Scotland
  13. Avengers, Enterprise Mobility and Network Centric Warfare
  14. Enterprise Mobility, Mobile Sensors and Data Collection
  15. Mobile Strategies and Consumer Products Companies
  16. Mobile Strategies and Situational Awareness
  17. Guidance on Selecting a Mobile Solution Vendor
  18. Development Models for Enterprise Mobility
  19. The Black Hole of Enterprise Mobility Apps
  20. Can You Handle the Truth about Enterprise Mobility and Big Data?
  21. Money Ball, Big Data, The Internet of Things and Enterprise Mobility
  22. Enterprise Mobility - A Business or IT Strategy?
  23. Mobile Strategies, PIOs, Optimized Intersections and Patterns of Life, Part 1
  24. Mobile Strategies, PIOs, Optimized Intersections and Patterns of Life, Part 2
  25. How Long is too Long for Mobile App Development?
  26. Conjecture, Enterprise Mobility and Mobile Strategies
  27. Enterprise Mobility, Remote Sensors and Nervous Systems
  28. Mobility and 4D Field Services
  29. More on Mobility and 4D Field Services
  30. Enterprise Mobility and Institutional Memory
  31. Mobile Apps the Front End to Big Data and Artificial Intelligence
  32. Velocity in Field Services
  33. Enterprise Mobility is Not for Everyone, Just Most
  34. The Value in a Mobile Enterprise Solution
  35. Enterprise Mobility, PIOs and PIVs
  36. Mobile Apps and the Marriage of My Virtual and Physical Worlds
  37. Thoughts on Enterprise Mobility, Mobile Banking and Global Economies
  38. Research on Enterprise Mobility
  39. Smart Ideas and Enterprise Mobility
  40. Field Services, Enterprise Mobility and Strategies
  41. The Benefit of Custom Mobile Applications
  42. Enterprise Mobility - A Tank Half Full
  43. Enterprise Mobility, Netcentric Operations and Military Mobility
  44. Death by Mobile App
  45. Consumer Smartphones or Industrial Grade Smartphones?
  46. What I am Learning about Enterprise Mobility
  47. More on Change Management and Enterprise Mobility
  48. Social Networking and Enterprise Mobility in Less Developed Regions
  49. Recruitment and Enterprise Mobility
  50. Enterprise Mobility and Manned/Unmanned Systems Integration Capabilities
  51. Where Should Mobile Intelligence Reside?
  52. The Importance of Mobile EAM and M2M
  53. Enterprise Mobility Application Predictions
  54. Managing a Mobile and Network Centric Operation, Part 1
  55. Managing a Mobile and Network Centric Operation, Part 2
*************************************************************
Kevin Benedict, Head Analyst for Social, Mobile, Analytics and Cloud (SMAC) Cognizant
View Linkedin Profile

Read the whitepaper on mobile, social, analytics and cloud strategies Don't Get SMACked
Learn about mobile strategies at MobileEnterpriseStrategies.com
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.

Swarming, Mobility, Speed and Digital Disruptions


Digital disruptors like social media, mobile communications, analytics and cloud services are introducing crazy new dynamics into our world.  These dynamics are impacting our industries, markets, businesses, management disciplines, politics and even our culture today.  I believe we have only just begun to recognize some of the impacts of these disruptions.   

We use Facebook to schedule the protests, Twitter to coordinate and YouTube to tell the world. ~ Egyptian Activist

One of the impacts of digital disruptors is the increasing emergence of swarming or swarm intelligence. Here is a definition, “Swarming involves the use of decentralized forces against an object or opponent, in a manner that emphasizes mobility, communication, autonomy and coordination or synchronization.” ~ Wikipedia

Swarming, although perhaps unrecognized, is precisely what the Egyptian Activist was referring to in the above quote.  The ability for autonomous or semi-autonomous groups to work closely together because of mobile communications, social media and the ability to coordinate or synchronize one’s actions, locations, status and intentions to accomplish a joint goal.

Swarming can be a powerful force multiplier as well, where fewer resources, with mobile communications, social media, good intelligence and coordination can accomplish more than by working alone and uncoordinated.

Nearly every day we witness demonstrations of how spontaneous social media based campaigns are changing our world.  We see companies changing policies and practices due to near-real-time feedback from the market swarm.

In the new book from Forrester Executive, James McQuivey, titled Digital Disruption, he describes how to embrace digital disruptions using what I view as a swarm strategies, "Abandon traditional 'return on investment' metrics and instead, for digitally disruptive initiatives, adopt ROD—'return on disruption.' Where the goal in ROI is to generate a known return from a known investment, the goal in ROD is to invest as little as possible, placing quick, cheap bets on the initiatives with the largest possible breakout success."  Once you see a success, swarm it! Communicate it!  Synchronize around it!  Invest in it.  Run with it.

I see the same approach emerging today in marketing.  Let’s try a variety of approaches to marketing and once the successful ones emerge, invest in them.  

There is so much we don’t know.  There is so much happening at such a fast pace in social media that we cannot effectively plan for or anticipate.  New management strategies, such as swarming, must emerge to address this rapid pace of change.
*************************************************************
Kevin Benedict, Head Analyst for Social, Mobile, Analytics and Cloud (SMAC) Cognizant
View Linkedin Profile

Read the whitepaper on mobile, social, analytics and cloud strategies Don't Get SMACked
Learn about mobile strategies at MobileEnterpriseStrategies.com
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.

Digital Disruption and Enterprise Mobility


This week in the March 18, 2013, edition of The Wall Street Journal was an article titled Built Not to Last by Alan Murray.  This article reviewed the book Digital Disruption by Forrester executive James McQuivey.  I loved the article and have now downloaded the book to read in its entirety.  I guess it is true that people like to hear what they already believe.  McQuivey identifies many of the trends I am also seeing in the market today.

In his book McQuivey argues that technology has made it possible to launch companies without large amounts of capital, proprietary labor pools or vast swaths of intellectual property. Increasingly, anyone with a powerful idea can assemble the tools to make his idea a reality.

Here are some of my favorite excerpts from Murray's article:

"The only defense to this massive attack [from digital disruption competitors], Mr. McQuivey says, is to mimic the enemy.   The consequences for existing companies, if you believe Mr. McQuivey, are extreme. "Digital tools allow digital disruptors to come at you from all directions— and from all ages, backgrounds and nationalities.  Equipped with a better mindset and better tools, thousands of these disruptors are ready to do better whatever it is that your company does. This isn't just competitive innovation, it's a fundamentally new type and scale and speed of competitive innovation."

I think of the hugely successful digital camera company GoPro.  I bet half of the films shown at the Banff Film Festival are filmed on a GoPro camera.  They enable every daredevil adventurer to film and produce their own next viral video for under $500.  A one person operation can now produce and publish film that would have taken a traditional studio millions of dollars.  That is digital disruption.

Here is another excerpt, "Managers must "adopt a digital disruptor's mindset" and "behave like a digital disruptor." "Gone are the days,” he writes, "when you can assign this task to the digital team or the mobile guys.  Everyone in every level of the organization must accept that they have the responsibility to become digital disruptors within their domain and as well as across traditional silos.”

I have been teaching SMAC (social, mobile, analytics and cloud) strategies sessions all over the globe the past few months.  I can verify that SMAC topics or digital disruptions cannot be limited to just the enterprise mobility team or the digital team.  Digital disruptions are impacting entire industries.  They must be taken seriously by all parties.

How do you face digital disruptions?  How do you know, what you don't know you need to know?  Here is McQuivey's recommendation, "Abandon traditional 'return on investment' metrics and instead, for digitally disruptive initiatives, adopt ROD—'return on disruption.' Where the goal in ROI is to generate a known return from a known investment, the goal in ROD is to invest as little as possible, placing quick, cheap bets on the initiatives with the largest possible breakout success."

Digital disruption means a mobile banking app can replace a physical branch.  It means a GoPro digital camera and YouTube can replace a studio.  It means Craig's List can replace billions in classified ad revenue for newspapers.  It means I can download McQuivey's e-book seconds after reading the review and by-pass the book store.

My advice is to face these digital disruptors early, before you get SMACked.  For a very good whitepaper by our Cognizant team on this subject download, Don't Get SMACked.

*************************************************************
Kevin Benedict, Head Analyst for Social, Mobile, Analytics and Cloud (SMAC) Cognizant
View Linkedin Profile

Read the whitepaper on mobile, social, analytics and cloud strategies Don't Get SMACked
Learn about mobile strategies at MobileEnterpriseStrategies.com
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.

Interviews with Kevin Benedict