Making Mobile Working Easy
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Today customers, suppliers, and partners expect business to work smartly and have the necessary communication systems in place to deliver good customer service – whatever the size of the company.
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| With 80% of business professionals now equipped with mobile working tools and 42% using mobile data such as wireless mobile data cards or Blackberry type devices there are now few excuses for a slow response to enquiries, missed opportunities or deadlines. |
But harnessing the power of electronic mobility to increase productivity and responsiveness without having a negative impact on work-life balance is a challenge for all enterprises today. With the attendant risk of intellectual property theft and breaches of security it is becoming critical for businesses to develop effective mobile working strategies for their employees.
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| A recent Nortel study showed that 55% of managers will work outside the office at some point this year. But customers, field workers, knowledge workers and heavy duty mobile users all have different mobile working requirements. The type of business application they need to interact with and the network or device type they use such as smartphones, personal digital assistants (PDAs), handheld computers or laptops can have a significant impact on the mobile workers flexibility of access to remote information. |
A new seminar to be presented be Fredi Nonyelu of Briteyellow will focus on how businesses can develop effective mobile working strategies to enhance work life balance for different categories of remote workers. The seminar will present practical examples illustrating the effective use mobile computing devices and examine possibilities that can help to avoid excessive costs and loss of control over data.
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Key Benefits
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- Discover how to enhance work-life balance through effective use of mobile working technologies
- Harness the power of electronic mobility to increase productivity and lower costs
- Create new opportunities through more flexible mobile working strategies.
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| For more information, please contact Jean Loughlan |
Tel +44 (0)1234 754324 email j.loughlan@cranfield.ac.uk
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