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10+2 Mobile Investor Relations apps to help you plan yours

by Yannis |April 29th, 2012

For most corporations, a mobile app catering for the investors’ voracious appetite for information is still considered a luxury. However, such an app makes perfect sense as not only does it make information available 24/7, but also it plants your brand in the hands of your target audience. Below we are exploring 10 such apps as well as 2 additional corporate apps that are not aimed at investors but still worth looking at for their exceptional user experience.

 

Unilever

This is one of the best looking apps. It is fast, simple, slick and rich in content. It makes great use of video and keeps PDFs to a minimum.

 

 

TVlogic

This app, probably created for the South Korean market, is rich in content, formats, as well as attitude. Although not the best looking app out there, it uses strong graphics that make browsing a more tactile experience.

 

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350m Smartphones and the Enterprise

by Gareth Phillips |March 13th, 2012

The conclusions of Forrester’s Ted Schadler and John McCarthy drawn from the interviews with 61 firms that are classed a mobile innovators strikes a number of chords with our experience.

It is definitely true that we are in a power shift. Tablet and smartphone sales data tell us that quite clearly. Quite whereabouts along the spectrum of that power shift depends on the organisation, its markets and the propensity of its stakeholders to consider and adopt new technology. In the firms that we have spoken to, it is that propensity that is driving the change.

Now you could argue that the propensity comes in part from the organisation and the market and you’d be right. But, it also comes from people’s attitude and their desire to create corporate competitive advantage – with a happy co-incidence of personal competitive advantage of being an early adopted. In short, it is about attitude and open-mindedness. And almost in all cases that we’ve experience it is driven by the business and not IT.

The downside of the business being the centre of gravity does drive change quickly, allows for easier (a relative term!) implementation of process change and perhaps a shorter-term ROI focus (as it is often operational rather capital expenditure).

The Forrester team see these challenges:

  • A multichannel coordination quagmire (e.g. how does an app work with a call centre’s process)
  • Business processes designed for transactions, not engagement (i.e. creating simple, one-off interactions)
  • Servers and infrastructure ill-prepared for exploding activity volumes
  • Middleware, application, and security models poorly constructed for engagement (i.e. the use of SOA and web service)
  • Design, development and governance processes misaligned with mobile requirements (i.e. designing with the user in mind not the existing system or data)

When we look at this from an enterprise app perspective (i.e. one used by employees), we’d include a few more consideration.

People

  • Designing for employees has subtle yet important differences to consumer or corporate app UX. At work our motivations are different. Given that by 2016 350m employees will use smartphones and business spending on mobile projects will have grown by 100 per cent to over $20bn per year
  • Building a small – forgiving, but representative – user base to aid the iterative development process is essential
  • Having a mobile champion or a team that’s empowered to enable mobility through the organisation will help – whether is the Chief Mobility Officer or a head of mobile

Process

  • Does the app support an existing process or re-invent it – or somewhere in between? It has to depend on what’s right on balance, but all three need consideration before development
  • Should business owners be allowed to create apps with the central teams’ support. On balance, yes because they have the business pain and gain. But they need rules in which to operate and support, plus a shared roadmap
  • Take mobile first approach with every app development

Technology

  • A Mobile Device Management strategy is essential. So is a clear strategy on supporting BYOD (By Your Own Device) and a rules on what platforms are supported
  • Creating a secure platform for devices that has a mobile friendly architecture
  • Look at the options of creating an enterprise app store

Lots to consider.  A fine balance needs to be struck between planning and doing. Some of the best planning insights come from having done something. Either way sharing development experiences across the organisation is essential.

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HTML5 Web App or Native – what’s best for an Enterprise App?

by Gareth Phillips |February 23rd, 2012

The Enterprise mobile app development debate continues at pace at Skyron.  With the relative benefits of native, HTML5 or hybrid apps discussed at length near enough  every day. Why the continued discussion? Because the landscape is changing continually.

The idea of “write once, run anywhere” has been a goal of the software industry at least ever since the arrival of Java. Perhaps before? Trouble was that it didn’t hold true and I remember the line being changed in jest to ‘write once, debug everywhere’.  Still the goal is the same, except this time it is now in the mobile arena.

So is the time right for the mass adoption and application of a “new” open standard?  Well, HTML5 does tick most of our developers’ boxes.

With the significant number of Operating Systems (and we can count the differing flavours of Android separately) and our growing unease around iOS’s walled garden (and OSX – but that’s a separate story)…we are feeling more at home with the new standard – especially in the Enterprise.

Why? Well, it clearly offers significant time and headache-saving benefits to a developer like us and to our clients. An HTML5 application runs on Android, iPhone or BlackBerry devices and the CSS3 features can be leveraged to adjust automatically the application page layout.

Factor in that HTML5 apps can bypass the stringent and lengthy app store approval processes (not needed for ‘internal’ Enterprise apps, admittedly) and also easily allow for new functionality and bug fixes to be deployed immediately – it starts to become more compelling.

But then the consumerisation of IT point raises its head again. Employees are increasingly used to the standards of native apps and sometime HTML5 just can’t quite deliver that high-end, on-platform experience that just makes native apps so compelling.

Then comes the offline data point. We’ve got a slightly different take here. A lot of commentators reference that we don’t always have ubiquitous access to the Internet (limiting the use of the app) – true.  Also true is HTML5′s ability to access and save data on the device is weaker.

But, we’d argue that having the data stored on a server with limited and secure offline access for key offline tasks is often the most secure for the Enterprise.

At this stage of the argument, we are in favour in HTML5 web app route for the Enterprise – just. Look at the option of converting a web app into a hybrid app for improved UI and access to handset features and we have a stronger argument for the web and hybrid app route. Especially given the common development path.

With that thought, we can conclude our debate that it is a web app future…..Not quite.

For example the Enterprise app that we released this week on iOS platform, we opted for native because of the extensive offline data requirements and the speed of interface.

The debate continues…in the meantime it is about making the right choice given the goals and the budget – just as it has always been.

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7 Mobile Business Apps infographics to help you make your case

by Yannis |January 16th, 2012

A year ago many companies we work with neither had allocated budget for mobile strategy and development nor saw the need for them. This year mobile business apps are all the rage. Everyone wants ideas, research, case studies, budgets, but also demonstrable value. Here are seven infographics about mobile business apps with lots of handy numbers.  Unfortunately it’s all US relevant. We did try to find some UK stuff, but it seems that the infographic creation business this end of the pond has yet to pick up pace.

 

 See complete infographic:  Zendesk, 2011

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