The finance and media sectors are embracing distributed IT architecture more
than other industries, but all businesses will need to make more and better use
of remote, branch office and mobile working practices in the future, according
to research by analyst Quocirca.
The finance and telecoms/media sectors topped the list for their use of
remote and mobile working, including branch offices that connect into a
centralised head office using the internet, email, videoconferencing and remote
applications. Healthcare and the public sector came bottom of the table, with
utility, retail and industrial sectors mid-table
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Quocirca analyst Bob Tarzey said all organisations will need to adapt as
working practices change, particularly when it comes to using electronic
communications between suppliers, customers and other parties involved in making
business processes work.
“It is fundamental that distributed organisations embed technology into key
business processes, rather than just allow senior managers to read email on the
beach or something like that,” he said.
Global law firm Simmons &
Simmons is an example of how distributed IT has been integrated into the
firm’s business processes, with most of its legal staff now accessing email and
legal documents remotely.
In January this year, the company consolidated 20 different local area
networks (LANs) and 30 different email servers into three regional data centres,
and implemented a centralised email and document management system to serve the
virtual legal practice groups dotted around the globe.
“The key drivers were to deliver email and get documents quickly and easily
to our users all over the world, as well as deliver time recording and contact
management applications over the web,” said James Mackay, network and security
manager at Simmons & Simmons.
With so much data being accessed remotely, the firm was understandably
nervous that WAN latency would slow down application response times and affect
user productivity, so it also deployed
Riverbed’s WDS WAN optimisation solution
to accelerate the delivery of its data.
The Quocirca research was based on 315 interviews with business and
technology managers at organisations employing 1,000 people or more across the
UK, Germany and France. The average number of locations each company used was
33, though the figure was 27 for the UK.
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