|
Marie Wieck, IBM:
Worklight Bought for Smartphones and Tablet Platform
January 31, 2012
In
a move that will help expand the enterprise mobile capabilities it
offers to clients, IBM has made a definitive agreement to acquire
Worklight, a privately held Israeli-based provider of mobile software
for smartphones and tablets.
Financial terms were
not disclosed.
With this acquisition, IBM's mobile offerings will span mobile
application development, integration, security and management. Worklight
will become an important piece of IBM's mobility strategy, offering
clients an open platform that helps speed the delivery of existing and
new mobile applications to multiple devices. It also helps enable secure
connections between smartphone and tablet applications with enterprise
IT systems.
In a recent study conducted by IBM of more than 3,000 global CIOs, 75
percent of respondents identified mobility solutions as one of their top
spending priorities.* In fact, for the first time ever, shipments of
smartphones exceeded total PC shipments in 2011.
“Our clients are under increased pressure to meet the growing demands of
a workforce and customer base that now treat mobility as mission
critical to their business,” said Marie Wieck, general manager, IBM
application and infrastructure middleware. “With the acquisition of
Worklight, IBM is well-positioned to help clients become smarter mobile
enterprises reaching new markets.”
Worklight accelerates IBM’s comprehensive mobile portfolio, which is
designed to help global corporations leverage the proliferation of all
mobile devices -- from laptops and smartphones to tablets. IBM has been
steadily investing in this space for more than a decade, both
organically and through acquisitions.
As a result, IBM can offer a complete portfolio of software and services
that delivers enterprise-ready mobility for clients -- from IT systems
all the way through to mobile devices. This builds on IBM's deep
understanding of its clients and their evolving IT needs over the last
several decades. Today, the world's top 20 communications service
providers use IBM technology to run their applications, while every day
more than one billion mobile phone subscribers are touched by IBM
software.
Worklight supports consumer and employee-facing applications in a broad
range of industries, including financial services, retail and
healthcare. For example, a bank can create a single application that
offers features to enable its customers to securely connect to their
account, pay bills and manage their investments, regardless of the
device they are using. Similarly, a hospital could use Worklight
technology to extend its existing IT system to allow direct input of
health history, allergies, and prescriptions by a patient using a
tablet.
Ubiquitous connectivity provides businesses with unique opportunities to
better connect with their customer base, interact with external users
and employees in more efficient ways, drive productivity and reach new
audiences. IBM's strategy is to offer its customers a complete set of
the software and services they need to effectively bring mobile devices
into their business infrastructure. These capabilities include:
- Build
and Connect Mobile Applications: The explosive growth of
mobile has created a fragmented landscape for enterprises to
support, often with limited budgets and skills. IBM’s development
and integration tools, complemented by Worklight, help clients to
develop mobile applications and their supporting infrastructures for
a variety of platforms just once - including Apple iOS and Google
Android - while offering capabilities to securely connect to
corporate IT systems.
- Manage and Secure
Mobile Devices: As Bring Your Own Device or “BYOD” gains
popularity, IT departments are looking to find an efficient and
secure way to enable employees’ use of mobile devices in the work
place. Rather than implement a separate infrastructure solely for
mobile devices, IBM’s offerings are helping customers deliver a
single solution that effectively manages and secures all endpoints.
These unified capabilities can now extend from servers and laptops,
to smartphones and tablets.
-
Extend Existing Capabilities and Capitalize on New Business
Opportunities: The rapid adoption of mobile computing is
also creating demand for organizations to extend their current
business capabilities to mobile devices, while capitalizing on the
new opportunities that mobile devices uniquely provide. For
instance, IBM's software, services and industry frameworks offer
clients the ability to use mobile to engage with their customers
around growing business opportunities such as analytics, commerce
and social business applications.
"In the last year, we
have seen surging demand from enterprises for mobility solutions that
will support the unique set of challenges introduced by new smartphone
and tablet platforms,” said Shahar Kaminitz, CEO and founder, Worklight.
“Building on our existing partnership with IBM, the acquisition of
Worklight further enhances IBM’s broad mobile portfolio. Now it will be
easier than ever for our clients to offer secure and connected
applications to their customers, business partners and employees.”
In addition to Worklight, IBM unveiled its Endpoint Manager for Mobile
Devices, a new software system that will enable corporate users to
manage and secure their mobile devices these applications are running
on.
The acquisition of Worklight is expected to close in 1Q12. Worklight
will sit within IBM’s Software Group. |