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Mobile Report Finds Strong Adoption of Tablets in the Enterprise

iPass Inc, a provider of enterprise mobility services, today published its quarterly Mobile Workforce Report.

The report found that 27 percent of mobile employees are using a tablet, typically an iPad, for work. While most mobile employees think that in the next five years there will be just one über device, that same mobile employee is carrying 2.68 devices for work today. iPass is calling these multiple devices the mobile stack, the new unit of computing that includes a laptop, a smartphone, and also a tablet.

“Tablet and smartphones use in the enterprise is being driven by the growth of cloud-based applications, in addition to the availability of these devices being reasonably priced,” said Steven Wastie, senior vice president marketing and product management at iPass. “User experience and economics drive this mobile stack phenomenon which shows every sign of expanding rapidly amongst the mobilocracy, as cloud computing finds a greater foothold with users both on a professional and personal level.”

The report, which drew from the experiences of more than 3,500 mobile employees at 1,100 enterprises worldwide, also found a 10 percent decline in preference for laptops as mobile employees increasingly prefer smartphones and tablets. The survey also uncovered:

• 20 percent of mobile workers selected a tablet as their one device of choice. 49 percent selected the smartphone as a device of choice (down from 63 percent in 2010) compared to 27 percent who prefer a laptop (down from 37 percent).

• The tablet market is also experiencing phenomenal growth, especially among mobile employees. 65 percent of mobile workers reported that they use a tablet for applications like sending and receiving email, surfing the Internet, watching video content and reading electronic books, newspapers and magazines. 27 percent report that they use a tablet for work.

• 59 percent of mobile workers use Wi-Fi on their smartphone at least one hour a day. 57 percent are satisfied with their mobile operator’s network coverage but 22 percent are dissatisfied with the cellular network speed.

• 71 percent of mobile workers would go on a data diet if wireless carriers increased charges for cellular data access – 29 percent would not change their behavior mostly because their employer pays the phone bill, while 22 percent would limit use to critical access.

• 94 percent of mobile workers will troubleshoot a problem themselves, while 13 percent will not contact the IT help desk at all when they have a technical problem. In lines with last year’s prediction that a mobilocracy in today’s workplace.

• Those 35 and older feel more productive working outside of the office, than those 34 and under who feel most productive working in the office – Not the generation gap that most would think.