This post is part of our ReadWriteMobile channel, which is dedicated to helping its community understand the strategic business and technical implications of developing mobile applications. This channel is sponsored by Alcatel-Lucent.
We all know what the acronym BYOB means, but when it comes to bringing your own mobile devices, there are several implications for enterprise IT managers. Of course, BYOD isn't a new concept: people have been bringing their own PCs and connecting them to corporate networks almost as soon as the PC was invented back in the 1980s. I recall dealing with this issue as a young IT worker, trying to convince my manager that the nascent Compaq (which is now buried inside HP's product lines) wouldn't bring our network to its knees. Fun times.
Lots of companies are now picking up the tab on their employees' laptops and smartphones, as Sybase blogger Eric Lai mentions in his post here. (His post is also fun to see a picture of the original 29-pound "luggable" Kaypro, which I remember taking on some flights and having to heft into the overhead bins back in the day.) Lai raises some interesting questions about how to shape your own BYOD policy, such as measuring the level of control-freakiness of your management, and the level of trust of your boss towards your own productivity. Those are good questions, but he doesn't go far enough.
I spoke to Brandon Hampton the Sales and Marketing director at Mobi Wireless Management, a mobility service vendor. He had some additional issues that IT managers should address before implementing their own BYOD programs.