iPass Mobile Workforce Report Predicts Rise of Mobilocracy Within Corporations Globally


SOURCE: iPass

Year-End Report Examines 2010 Trends and Predictions for 2011 and Beyond

SAN FRANCISCO, CA–(Marketwire – December 9, 2010) – iPass Inc. (NASDAQ: IPAS), a leading provider of enterprise mobility services, today released its year-end Mobile Workforce Report at the GigaOm NetWork conference. The report predicts the rise of the Mobilocracy — mo·bil·oc·ra·cy (moh-buhl’kresI) — n. pl. mobilocracies. 1) a powerful class of worker who relies on mobile devices for greater productivity; 2) the common worker, esp. as a mobile workforce — within corporations, as mobile employees’ behaviors and preferences increasingly play a larger role in IT decisions and directions.

“Mobility used to be the exception to the rule for enterprises, now mobility is the rule with mobile employees using their chosen tools to increase productivity up to 240 more working hours each year,” said iPass CEO, Evan Kaplan. “Mobile devices are cheap, but networks are expensive. And as mobility increasingly shapes the IT landscape, enterprises will need to develop a holistic mobility strategy that maximizes the use of the best and most cost-effective networks.”

The year-end Mobile Workforce Report is based on surveys of more than 4,000 mobile workers and nearly 30 million user sessions. It examines the trends that shaped the mobile workforce in 2010, and five predictions for 2011 and beyond. The report predicts:

1. The rise of the Mobilocracy — trained in the consumer world, today’s end users are increasingly more sophisticated in troubleshooting technical issues than a generation ago, and they expect to play a larger role in technology decisions within their company and rely on IT for education and training.
2. ‘Bring your own mobile’ device will become a company policy — In the next several years there will be a shift in mobile device liability. At the same time employees and their companies will become much more cognizant of which type of network they connect their device to and how much it costs — regardless where liability rests.
3. Security will get a makeover — With a trend toward “bring your own,” enterprise-security will need a significant makeover. A shift will take place from securing each individual system, to securing data — much of it in public and private clouds. Mobile employees need to be custodians of their own mobile security, and IT needs to provide the educational resources to empower employees on how to operate in a safe manner.
4. The trivialization of place will increase — work is something people do, not a place that they go to. Where people work will matter less and less for a number reasons from improved productivity, to decreased carbon footprint and reduced office expenditure.
5. Social boundaries will be redefined — mobile employees will develop coping strategies to deal with hyper-connectivity and increasing demands on their attention. Most will find a way to redefine their social boundaries between work and personal time.

The complete report is available at http://www.ipass.com/mwr as well as copies of the previous quarter’s iPass Mobile Workforce Reports released throughout 2010.

About iPass Inc.

Founded in 1996, iPass (NASDAQ: IPAS) is a leading provider of enterprise mobility services with 3,500 customers, including more than 420 of the Forbes Global 2000. Additional information is available at www.iPass.com or on Smarter Connections, the iPass blog. 

iPass® is a registered trademark of iPass Inc. Other company names and product or service names mentioned herein are the trademarks of their respective owners.

Media Contacts:
US: Kate Blatt
iPass
Tel. +1 650 232 4205
Email: [email protected]

John Gallagher
iPass
Tel. +1 650 232 4233
Email: [email protected]

UK: Nick Sutton
AxiCom
Tel: +44 (0) 208 392 4086
Email: [email protected]

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