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Unisys global study shows consumerization of technology is driving business innovation and demanding more of IT services

Survey Suggests Companies Are Seeking and Finding New Ways to Transform Support Expenses into Productivity Investments

BLUE BELL, Pa., August 28, 2007 -- New research commissioned by Unisys Corporation (NYSE:UIS) reveals that the increasing “consumerization” of information technology used by today’s mobile workforce is the key factor shaping the IT support services that enterprises provide their employees.

More people working for businesses are using consumer technologies such as laptops, personal digital assistants (PDAs) and iPhones in the workplace. As this happens, the study shows, organizations are increasingly shifting from using standardized, “one size fits all” IT support services. Instead, they are adopting flexible service strategies that place the highest priority on meeting the needs of employees who work directly with clients and drive revenue. The study also reveals that enterprise IT organizations are increasingly open to using outsourcing partners to deliver those services.

The results of the study, conducted by IDG Research Services on behalf of Unisys, were based on interviews with nearly 700 IT decision makers worldwide. (Key U.S. results are reviewed in a separate press release http://www.unisys.com/about__unisys/news_a_events/08288811.htm, also issued today.)

Supporting the Mobile Workforce in a Consumerized Environment

Respondents indicated that 34 percent of their employees are mobile, remote or both. As a result, more people are using a greater number of computing and communications devices. In fact, 91 percent of respondents to the Unisys study reported that employees have increased their use of computers, on average, by 57 percent over the past five years. Forty-nine percent of employees now use multiple devices – primarily mobile ones – over the course of a typical workday.

As those workers become more dispersed, mobile applications and technologies such as CRM applications for customer service, laptops and PDAs are emerging as the new foundations for employee productivity and company growth and profitability.

“The proliferation of consumer and other mobile devices in the enterprise poses a special challenge to IT organizations,” said Joe Hogan, vice president, Strategic Outsourcing Programs, Unisys. “They must invest in new processes that help client-facing employees exploit the technology for greater productivity and new revenue channels.”

Added Craig Samuel, vice president, Business Innovation, Unisys, “By implementing new service paradigms, CEOs and CIOs can transform what has traditionally been a support cost into an investment for future corporate growth and individual impact in the knowledge economy.” Samuel is also president of the Institute for Innovation & Information Productivity (IIIP, www.iii-p.org), which recently published research into the importance of creating value from IT capital expenditures in a rapidly consumerizing marketplace.¹

New Tools Call for New Processes

The Unisys research study indicates that enterprise IT leaders are adopting newer and more innovative processes to realize additional value from next-generation technology. They provide continuous IT support for more mobile workers, adopting a “blended” mix of service options targeted to users based on function and revenue impact. Those options combine call centers and on-site support with more advanced knowledge-based tools – such as those drawing on information about resolution of previous service events – which help employees effectively complete their work anywhere, any time.

The diverse mix of approaches to end-user services most frequently used today by responding organizations includes call centers (53 percent), end-user training (49 percent), 24x7 support (48 percent), tiered support (45 percent) and IT training investments (40 percent).

The outlays for 24x7 support and end-user training, especially, indicate a growing commitment among organizations to making their employees more productive and educating them on the tools that they can use to help the IT organization help them.

The trend toward tiered support represents another significant cultural change – nearly half of the respondents are adopting schemes that prioritize support based on the contribution certain employees make to the top or bottom line, not their position in the corporate hierarchy. “Tiered support favors those end users who can most benefit from innovation,” said Hogan.

Those companies characterized by respondents as more consumer technology-friendly had a greater percentage of mobile or remote workers (47 percent vs. 34 percent overall), as well as more employees using multiple computing devices (67 percent vs. 49 percent overall). Those companies were more likely to introduce new processes, such as those cited above, to support their end-users.

In addition, global organizations clearly recognize that services must continually adapt to a growing diversity of technologies, escalating end-user support requirements and changing business needs. In addition to the existing services options already cited as being in use now, respondents indicated that in the immediate future – within six months – they planned to enhance their end-user service capabilities by: introducing or expanding the use of knowledge bases (29 percent) and self-service (20 percent), as well as outsourcing support services (18 percent), increasing IT training investments (29 percent) and increasing end-user training (21 percent).

IT Decision-Makers See Outsourcing as Key Way to Deliver Innovation

Providing a broad range of new and innovative support services can strain an IT organization’s internal resources. The Unisys research shows that IT groups are already thinking carefully about outsourcing management of those services to an expert partner in order to realize operational and cost advantages.

According to the survey, 20 percent of respondents said they have already increased outsourcing in support of end-user services, while 18 percent plan to increase outsourcing within the next six months, and another 20 percent plan to do so within two years.

The majority of the responding companies turning to outsourcing said they did so to strengthen their 24x7 IT service and business processes, and to enhance security. They recognized that a go-it alone approach is not feasible when trying to harmonize end-user computing needs with the continuing wave of emerging technologies.

About the Research

The global end-user research was commissioned by Unisys and conducted online in the spring of 2007 by IDG Research Services. Respondents were 686 IT management and senior executives responsible for financial and operations functions across 10 countries worldwide: United States, Brazil, United Kingdom, Germany, France, Netherlands, Belgium, Sweden, China and Australia. The organizations represented in this study have revenues exceeding $1 billion in the US, $500 million in Europe. For the full results, see the report “Consumerization and IT Services – Unisys 2007 Research on End-User Services in the Mobile Workplace” at the Unisys Unlearn Outsourcing site.

About Unisys

Unisys is a worldwide information technology services and solutions company. We provide consulting, systems integration, outsourcing and infrastructure services, combined with powerful enterprise server technology. We specialize in helping clients use information to create efficient, secure business operations that allow them to achieve their business goals. Our consultants and industry experts work with clients to understand their business challenges and create greater visibility into critical linkages throughout their operations. For more information, visit www.unisys.com.

¹Note to Editors: The IIIP study cited in this release is titled “Information Technology, Productivity and Innovation,” by Erik Brynjolfsson and Adam Saunders, of the Center for Digital Business at MIT Sloan School of Management.

RELEASE NO.: 0828/8810

http://www.unisys.com/about__unisys/news_a_events/08288810.htm

Unisys is a registered trademark of Unisys Corporation. All other brands and products referenced herein are acknowledged to be trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective holders.



Contacts 
Unisys Corporation
Brian Daly, 215-986-2214
brian.daly@unisys.com
or
Peppercom
Jennifer Kuhl, 212-931-6111
jkuhl@peppercom.com

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