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Research highlights mobile is the future for business

CIOs say it takes an average of five months to deliver new versions of mobile applications for existing mobile device updates, confirming they cannot keep up with device vendors releasing updates every couple of months. That’s according to an independent global research study undertaken by Vanson Bourne and commissioned by Borland, a Micro Focus company.

Of the 590 CIOs and IT directors polled from nine countries around the globe, the majority (79%) confirmed the teams delivering these mobile apps are a mix of in-house and outsourced support. However, a third labelled their mobile development team as sluggish, middling or outpaced, showing a distinct lack of faith in their ability to develop and deliver against business requirements. This poses a particular challenge given respondents predict a 50% increase in the number of business apps that need to be made accessible on mobile devices over the next three years (from 31% in 2013 to 46% in 2016).

Mainframe causes further complications

The ability to deliver timely mobile apps presents an even greater problem to mainframe organizations:

  • 78% of CIOs said that having a mainframe makes developing or implementing mobile applications that work with their existing systems more difficult
  • A whopping 86% confirmed mobile application vendors and developers are more reticent to work with mainframe organizations. These findings confirm there is a real need to bridge the world of mainframe and mobile to ease the challenges for mainframe organizations

The OS race

CIOs made a clear choice to back Android as their mobile operating system, with 78% of organizations developing their mobile apps for this system today.

  • Apple iOS came second, with 65% developing for it, and Windows Phone third at 52%
  • Although Android is expected to maintain its pole position in two years’ time with 77%, iOS and Windows Phone will close the gap with 71% and 65% respectively
  • CIOs are not predicting a comeback for Blackberry OS. Lagging fourth at 36%, respondents estimate a miserly 1% growth to 37% in two years time
  • Unsurprisingly, Symbian is the clear loser with only 7% choosing to develop for the operating system

Additional findings

Operational efficiency trumps customer retention as the main reason to go mobile: In order of priority, CIOs want to support mobile applications to improve operational efficiency, improve operational cost-effectiveness, capture new customers, and retain existing customers.

Developing for the mini-tablet will more than double: Today, 23% of organizations are developing mobile apps for the mini-tablet, but this is estimated by CIOs to rise to 48% over the next two years.

Mobile development teams are outsourced and outpaced: 37% of CIOs outsource 25%-50% of their mobile application development work. A staggering 51% of CIOs in the UK describe their mobile development team as middling, sluggish or outpaced.

Archie Roboostoff, Borland Solutions Portfolio Director at Micro Focus, said: “Mobile apps play a critical role in every organization’s business strategy today. However, the consumer in all of us is demanding more, and companies are under increasing pressure to release higher quality mobile apps faster and more often than ever before.

This was posted in Bdaily's Members' News section by David Silva .

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