Mobile Workers Consider Company Laptops Their Own Property

IT departments challenged by changing attitudes and behaviors towards use of company mobiles and laptops outside the office

by Michael Smith

Vodafone UK has revealed that people view their work mobiles and laptops differently when out of the office, potentially exposing a business to security threats. Personal use of laptops and mobile devices goes unregulated once out of the office and can lead to a change in behaviour from the employee, following research sampling more than 1000 business people.

Nearly half of people surveyed possessed a work laptop with internet access that is used regularly outside of work. The findings suggest that business and IT managers need to balance management, security and use of company property outside of working hours with employees’ increasing expectation that personal use of company mobile devices is acceptable in an always on, always contactable world.

One in two employees consider their work issued laptops or mobile devices their own property once away from the office, with 68% stating that using a work-supplied laptop outside working hours is a ‘fair exchange’ in the work/life balance equation.

The problem is that those people must come to wake up to though, and the sooner they are educated to this the better, that those devices are for work-use only. Which means the company laptop is n-o-t used for surfing the Net not is the work cell-phone used for making private and personal calls, and this is regardless as to whether in the end the person pays for the calls a little. Neither does one download ring tones from often dubious sources onto a work-issues cell-phone. Shame that ethics seem to have gone out of the window in our times.

Organisations must also consider what potential risks employees expose devices to, during this downtime. With 49.6% of employees using their own mobile broadband connection and 29.6% using WiFi to facilitate use of their company mobile device when at home, businesses are at risk of malware attacks, other security threats, and legal liability. It can also affect performance issues across the company network as devices are used to store personal music, photos, videos and other downloaded content.

65% of senior managers surveyed agreed that it is acceptable for employees to use work-supplied laptops for their own purposes outside of work. Managers feel that, as recession bites and traditional forms of reward such as pay-rises and bonuses are harder to deliver, small ‘perks’ become more important in retaining key staff.

Mike Banwell, Head of Business Services, Vodafone UK explains: “Whilst it is right that businesses need to keep a close eye on company assets such as netbooks, laptops and other mobile devices to prevent inappropriate, illegal or irresponsible use, we don’t want to get to a situation where attitudes change to such an extent that policies and procedures become so restrictive that employees actively circumvent them, or that the devices become so unfriendly that the benefits employees and businesses are obtaining from mobile working are severely reduced.”

Vodafone addresses issues identified in this latest research with Vodafone Secure Remote Access (VSRA) – a comprehensive, managed service that brings a specific mobile perspective to securing information, devices and connectivity and enforcing IT policy for today’s flexible workforce.

VSRA limits users to pre-authorized, approved networks (including 3G, Wi-Fi and fixed line broadband), ensures that users can only access appropriate content, and provides a range of security options including preventing company data being downloaded to USB drives or CD. It enables the flexibility that meets the personal requirements of the user as well as security and management requirements of the organization.

The research was conducted by Opinion Matters in June 2008 from a sample of 1,116 UK workers.

© M Smith (Veshengro), 2009
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