Is The iPhone Ready For Business Yet?

The Apple iPhone 3.0 finally addresses security and emerges as a serious business smartphone, even if the BlackBerry is still better for email

Oracle Led by Employees

IT at Oracle turned its focus to the iPhone after employees purchasing their own devices started asking for email and calendar support. In June 2007 it began supporting email for the iPhone 2G, and by January 2009 it had 4,000 iPhones deployed globally.

For Oracle’s IT team, the iPhone’s development platform and user interface enable the creation of collaboration and business applications for employees. On the down side, management tools are lacking and VPN password caching has been an issue; though both of these are expected to be resolved with the iPhone 3.0.

Battery life an issue

The pharmaceutical company included in the study, which began with a pilot program of 20 employees in July 2008, and expects to have 650 users on the iPhone by December 2009, was also frustrated by the VPN password caching issue, as well as battery life issues.

“When you’re using a device for e-mail, battery life isn’t an issue,” said Schadler. “But if you’re also surfing the Internet or using it for corporate applications, nothing will last doing that.”

How was the issue addressed? “They’re trickle-feeding,” said Schadler. “They’re telling people to plug in their devices when they’re at their desks.”

Despite the battery issues, the pharmaceutical company said it was paying $360 (£240) per device per year on voice and data contracts, compared with what it was spending on BlackBerry devices.

The Way Forward for BlackBerry?

BlackBerry manufacturer Research In Motion (RIM) has of late been working on moving from being solely a business device provider, to better piquing the interest of consumers; while Apple has been doing exactly the reverse. If, with the iPhone 3.0, Apple has accomplished this, where does that leave the BlackBerry?

“For messaging, for calendar, the BlackBerry is the best device. RIM is doing everything right in so many ways,” said Schadler. “But they need to step up a few things. The first is the browser.”

Even with the BlackBerry Storm, we asked. “The browser is adequate,” said Schadler, “but it’s not a pleasure to use.”

Second, he said; “They have to do a more aggressive job of making their terminal attractive for developers. And Apple is not developer-friendly, but they’ve got 25,000 apps.”

Schadler concedes that RIM now has the BlackBerry App World open, and the company is making progress on this front. Also, talking to IT departments about the iPhone, there are still security concerns they’ll highlight, which still make the iPhone right for some businesses but not others such as financial companies.

“(IT departments) will highlight that the configuration files were hackable, that you can’t turn off the camera … Apple says, in its list of feature functions, those things will be fixed with 3.0,” said Schadler.

“For those companies we spoke to, though, these (issues) weren’t deal breakers”, concluded Schadler.