Despite Android's strong overall growth, enterprises appear to continue to be wary of the mobile operating system, according to data released by Good Technology.
Apple's iOS operating system is so much more popular than Android among Good's enterprise customers, that in the second quarter there were more activations among Good customers of just the iPad than of all Android smartphones and tablets combined.
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Good offers a system that includes smartphone software, server software, and a network operations center that allows smartphone and tablet users to securely access corporate data. It periodically releases reports about its customers' use of mobile devices. The reports do not include information about BlackBerry smartphones, since Research in Motion secures those devices using its optional BlackBerry Enterprise Server (BES) product, or does it include data on devices using Windows Phone and WebOS, neither of which Good does not yet support.
Overall, iPad and iPad 2 activations made up 27.2 percent of all new devices on Good's system during the quarter, compared to 24 percent for Android smartphones, Good reported. Android tablets made up just 3.1 percent of overall tablet activations, a decline compared to the first quarter, Good said. In addition, customers activated double the number of iPhones compared to Android smartphones, Good found. iPhones represented 66 percent of all smartphone activations whereas Android had 33 percent of all smartphone activations.
Because sales of Android smartphones have surpassed iPhone sales in the overall market, the report indicates that enterprises are reluctant to allow employees to use Android smartphones. According to ComScore, as of May, 38 percent of U.S. smartphone subscribers used Android compared to 27 percent who used iPhones. RIM trailed with 25 percent.
Although the Android OS includes the Microsoft ActiveSync protocol, so users can receive email from Exchange and ActiveSync-compatible corporate servers on the smartphones, it does not allow for all of the security features that ActiveSync enables. Many enterprises worry that the Android smartphones aren't secure enough to be permitted to access corporate information.
Apple's dominance of the enterprise market comes as a surprise to Good, which had previously predicted that Android smartphones would surpass iPhone activations this year. "We no longer predict that will happen this year, given Apple's recent and planned product releases," Good wrote in its report.
Good found that financial services companies began adopting mobile devices in a big way during the second quarter. The segment accounted for 40 percent of all activations for Good during the quarter. Business and professional services came in second in terms of activations, with 17 percent, Good reported.
Financial services workers showed particular interest in the iPad during the quarter. Of the industries Good tracks, financial services accounted for 47 percent of iPad activations in the quarter, which was more than double the percentage of activations in any other industry.
Nancy Gohring covers mobile phones and cloud computing for the IDG News Service. Follow Nancy on Twitter at @idgnancy. Nancy's e-mail address is Nancy_Gohring@idg.com.