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The bring-your-own-device (BYOD) phenomenon has entered the mainstream, with nearly 70% of all smartphone-owning professionals now using their personal device to access corporate data. But there are significant security risks.

Analyst group Ovum says almost 80% of today’s BYOD activity remains inadequately managed by IT departments, leaving businesses not only at risk of data loss but unable to claim they took reasonable preventative measures.

In what Ovum says is the largest study yet conducted into employee BYOD behaviour and attitudes, surveying over 4,000 full-time employees, researchers found a “concerning level of ignorance by IT professionals about the BYOD trend.” Nearly half of the respondents’ employers’ IT departments either did not know of BYOD or were ignoring its existence, operating a “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy, while a further 8% actively discouraged it. Levels of ignorance by IT were significantly higher in mature economies with more rigid working practices, such as those of Continental Europe, compared to high-growth economies such as Brazil, India and South Africa.

“Despite much speculation, BYOD is here to stay,” says Richard Absalom, senior analyst at Ovum. “It’s therefore worrying to see such a high proportion of businesses burying their head in the sand when it comes to planning adequately for it. BYOD multiplies the number of networks, applications and end-points through which data is accessed. These are the three main points at which data is vulnerable,  so if left unmanaged, BYOD creates a huge data security risk.”

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One of the key questions about the outlook for the BYOD phenomenon is whether, as enterprises update their corporate device fleets to the large touchscreen devices that employees actually want and are buying through consumer channels, the effect will be neutralised.

But Ovum’s research shows that 50% of employees say privacy concerns would stop them accessing their own personal apps on a corporate provisioned smartphone. For half of all employees, a corporately provisioned smartphone or tablet is not a perfect substitute for a personally owned device, and this will continue to give momentum to the BYOD trend.

Ovum also finds a divide in BYOD behaviour and corporate IT attitudes between high-growth and mature economies. “BYOD in the developing IT and consumer electronics markets is big and structurally predisposed to get bigger,” explains Absalom.

“Overall, we are seeing more encouragement of BYOD behaviour in high-growth economies, such as South Africa, Brazil, India and the Asian Tiger economies, than in mature economies, notably continental Western Europe.”

“The way people work will have a profound effect on how BYOD is rolled out and managed within an organisation. As such, it’s imperative that IT departments act quickly to develop and implement clear policies governing BYOD.

BYOD can provide an added advantage in terms of productivity and efficiency but to do this it will be important to get the right blend of process, policy, people, and technology management,” says Absalom.

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Graeme Philipson

Graeme Philipson is senior associate editor at iTWire and editor of sister publication CommsWire. He is also founder and Research Director of Connection Research, a market research and analysis firm specialising in the convergence of sustainable, digital and environmental technologies. He has been in the high tech industry for more than 30 years, most of that time as a market researcher, analyst and journalist. He was founding editor of MIS magazine, and is a former editor of Computerworld Australia. He was a research director for Gartner Asia Pacific and research manager for the Yankee Group Australia. He was a long time IT columnist in The Age and The Sydney Morning Herald, and is a recipient of the Kester Award for lifetime achievement in IT journalism.

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