Service Provider IT (SPIT) News, Analysis, Events, and Research
Sign up for our Free Telecom Weekly Newsletter
Connect with us
  • SPIT Explained

    Service Provider Information Technology, or SPIT, is Light Reading's term for the evolving set of non-traditional telecom (and data networking) technologies that allow for a greater degree of flexibility in the creation, management, delivery, and monetization of new-generation communications services.Learn More
  • SPIT Infographic

    What exactly is Service Provider IT and how does it relate to the communications ecosystem? Here's a graphic that'll give you a snapshot of what we're talking about and appeal to your inherent aesthetic sensibilities
  • SPIT Manifesto

    What is SPIT, why is it 'hot stuff' and how does it relate to the major challenges facing communications service providers today? The updated SPIT Manifesto answers these questions and achieves the near impossible task of giving a slime green splat a happy home.Learn More
  • SPIT Video

    For operators looking to develop, deliver and monetize new services, run their companies more efficiently and provide an overall better experience for their customers, Service Provider IT, or SPIT, is just as important as the network.Learn More

Telecom News Analysis  

Verizon Gets Personal With Mobile Management

Verizon Business has launched a cloud-based offering to enable enterprise IT departments to more easily manage and secure employee mobile devices, and to extend that support to their personal tablets, smartphones and PCs. (see Verizon Takes Enterprise Mobility to the Cloud.)

The new Verizon Enterprise Mobility as a Service offer is not the first cloud-based Mobile Device Management (MDM) solution by a long shot. In fact, Verizon is entering a crowded field that includes companies that have also launched similar cloud-based offers, including Virtela Technology Services Inc. , SAP AG (NYSE/Frankfurt: SAP) and Fujitsu Ltd. (Tokyo: 6702; London: FUJ; OTC: FJTSY).

The market for mobile device management is expected to be large as IT departments, facing tight budgets and staffing cuts, struggle to keep up with the widespread use of mobile devices to access enterprise data and apps. And they're looking to relieve that struggle without making major capex investments.

Verizon claims to be the one of the first, if not the first, to let IT departments manage all devices and pay for that cloud-based management on a per-user basis. Employees use both corporate smartphones as well as their own mobile devices, so managing access on a per-user basis, regardless of device, offers a more logical approach, says Steve Mancuso, associate director, product management, for Verizon Enterprise Security.

"We will help enterprises manage all devices -- laptops, smartphones, tablets -- and mobility services key to helping an employee be productive on the job," Mancuso says. "And all of that is managed through a single pane of glass -- a portal interface that lets you set policies on a user basis, across all devices that user has."

Those policies can then change as the user's role or status changes, he adds.

Working in a BYOD world
Verizon's new service allows the enterprise to set up a dual persona on a personal smartphone that an employee is using in a Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) arrangement. A secure container is created on the employee device and managed along with any other devices assigned to that employee.

Included in the service is access to 500,000 Boingo Wireless Inc. hot spots globally for Wi-Fi offload, a move that helps to reduce the cost of keeping mobile employees connected while they travel.

The service is independent of which wireless operators are being used by the enterprise, and covers iOS, Android, Windows and Blackberry devices. Verizon is using a mobile device management platform developed by Rova and its dual personality capability for smartphones comes from another partner, Enterproid.

Verizon's Enterprise Mobility is a Service is available in 30 countries in Europe, the Americas and Asia.

Why this matters
Mobile device management is a hot topic for IT departments, so creating a solution that offers a greater degree of simplicity -- by focusing on a per-user management and extracting all the other complications -- could give Verizon an edge in serving enterprises.

For more

— Carol Wilson, Chief Editor, Events, Light Reading

Newest Comments First       Display in Chronological Order
Be the first to post a comment regarding this story.
The blogs and comments are the opinions only of the writers and do not reflect the views of Light Reading. They are no substitute for your own research and should not be relied upon for trading or any other purpose.

Software-Defined Networking: An Extreme View

SPONSORED BY