November 19, 2009

Get ready now for netbooks in the enterprise

It's not too early for IT managers to begin determining policies and standards

Netbooks in the enterprise are coming, some observers believe. And whether it takes a year or five for netbooks to catch on in corporate America, it behooves IT managers to get ready sooner rather than having to clean up a mess later on.

Remember, many IT managers initially refused to accept PCs and, later, iPhones for enterprise use. Employees demanded they reconsider and brought the devices in anyway. That scenario could well play out with netbooks, some believe.

[ Can a netbook serve as your primary PC? When does a netbook stop being a netbook? | Read more about the shape of the coming netbook revolution. | What netbooks should your business consider? The InfoWorld Test Center uncovers the best netbooks for business. ]

Chris Neal, vice president and head of the technology practice for market-research firm Chadwick Martin Bailey in Boston, said that the IT executives his firm has surveyed are "split" on the notion of whether netbooks will make serious inroads into corporate America. Of the 158 IT professionals his firm recently polled, 25 percent said netbooks will likely remain a consumer phenomenon, while 21 percent said the devices will be widely deployed in companies.

So far, around 20 percent of respondents have deployed netbooks, but on a 'limited basis," Neal said. Although the devices are popular with on-the-road professionals, "they don't have enough horsepower to do local processing," he explained. And with laptops typically priced at only around $200 more than netbooks, corporate buyers are more likely to spend the additional money for a fuller-featured machine, he said.

Slowly making their way
In fact, barriers to netbook adoption are currently the rule for large companies. Hewlett-Packard makes the Mini 2140 netbook. But a corporate spokesperson said that HP's internal IT department does not support or issue netbooks.

Standard IT department objections are around netbooks' consumer operating systems -- Windows 7 Starter Edition in the majority of cases -- that don't connect to corporate networks, and inadequate security. Rob Enderle, president and principal analyst for the Enderle Group, based in San Jose, Calif., suggested that 75 percent of enterprises have policies demanding TPM (Trusted Platform Module) and biometrics in new laptops. These mandates effectively block the adoption of all current netbooks.

James Brehm, emerging-wireless analyst for Frost & Sullivan in San Antonio, has investigated several netbook pilot projects in large companies, but none he's followed has grown to a larger deployment. "Companies are saying absolutely not, but IT directors are open to new things to help lower costs. The netbook rise coincided with the decline in the economy. This created markets where large companies took a look."

His theory: the pilots are too new to make any real inroads into corporate IT yet.

Maulik Pandya, Dell's senior planning manager for commercial notebooks, predicts netbooks could capture around 5 percent of enterprise sales -- machines that would have otherwise been laptops. But Enderle disagrees, suggesting that if end-users had their druthers, netbooks would far outpace this 5 percent mark.

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