It's been about two years since BYOD has been trialed, tested and deployed in companies. According to Henein, it has been a big pain for some, and, in some cases it's just ended up being far more expensive than originally envisaged.
"The promise was that it would save you money. It sounded good on paper. The problem came when you had to maintain this, because initially you had one guy, the one guy who had more mobility. He had a BlackBerry, because back in the day it was what people in the enterprise space used. Then you had to go and hire more people or upskill existing people on iOS, Android and Windows phones, and you were not really sure what's going to come next, because, in the consumer space, things move a lot faster than in the enterprise space. If you remember 20 years ago, enterprise innovation drove consumer products: desktops started out in the enterprise space - they were very expensive and then made their way into our homes."
Things have changed a lot in the past 20 years in the technology space. Today we have to maintain so many things in the enterprise space that come from the consumer space. "Either you are going to hire more people, or you are going to upskill the people that you have to make sure that they can maintain those new operating systems and devices," says Henein.
It's a race against consumer innovation - which is really a very difficult race to run.
He says that many people mistake regulation for security. "Regulation is about compliance with a set of rules that ensure that a base-line is respected, but that base-line is the lowest bar. And you shouldn't really aim for the lowest bar..."
Companies should in fact aim far higher because that will ensure happy and satisfied customers, ultimately leading to more business for you. "Compliance is the stick, customer satisfaction is the target," says Henein.
It's therefore not the best idea to simply build products based on what you think your customers need - rather build products based on conversations. By finding out what customers want and need, and building products accordingly, you'll get a much greater return on investment on your spend and you'll be able to compete better.
When it comes to security, it all comes down to independent certification - how can you trust what a vendor tells you about a certain product is actually true? "A vendor's job is to portray their product in the best light possible. So why would you trust a vendor talking about a solution?"
"For this reason, we spend quite a bit of money, research and development and resources on certification." He advises that it's important when someone comes to you with a bunch of statements about their product, that you ask them to validate their statements with certification.
Henein identified three non-traditional threats enterprises must be aware of:
"This is no problem at all in a consumer context, but in an enterprise context, that means you've shared all your customer details willingly with a third party," he explains.
WhatsApp is not malicious but it's a consumer application and that's what people need to remember.
Companies shouldn't overkill on compliance or on security. It should be unlimited capabilities for the end-user and at the same time no compromise on security.
The rise of shadow IT
Another point Henein highlighted is the rise of shadow IT - when people within an organisation start sharing work files among team members via a third party server such as Dropbox. He warns that the issue with this is that the files may contain sensitive or confidential information about your company or even the company you are doing business with.
His advice to be particularly aware of free services - nothing is ever really free. With free services things can actually become quite complex in terms of who actually owns the information.
When it comes to shadow IT, the first reaction most IT people have is:
What to do from here?
Henein left attendees with the following advice on how to approach this landscape going forward:
Nader Henein: Well, there's not going to be any shortage of mobile devices or tablets if you look at the market today. That over-complicates the BYOD approach because someone will go on vacation to Japan and come back with a device and an operating system nobody has ever seen. If they are someone in a senior position, they will walk up to the IT department and tell them to make it work for them. So, BYOD is going to continue to increase.
What businesses are doing now, and I believe more and more will start doing, is adopting the Choose Your Own Device (CYOD) approach. Because organisations can't support all the devices under the sun, they test and select a series of devices which they will support and create a list for employees. That list is in constant change based on what's new in the market. This allows flexibility and some form of control to the organisation.
Henein: Countries like Nigeria are actually moving very very fast. The adoption rate is staggering. And Africa is in fact catching up to Europe as well. In Europe, the idea behind these sessions is that we take knowledge from the Middle East, from Africa, from Europe, from the US and all different parts of the world, and say this is what we've seen in terms of threats, in terms of experiences etc. Let's see if we can get ahead of the curve. Let's see if we can save you some of the pain that other regions have gone through and allow you to get ahead of that. So this is really the task of thease sessions that we do.
So Africa I see moving forward very aggressively and that's good because you have a hunger for growth and you get productivity without having to go through the hurdles other regions had to go through.