IT managers will need to do more to provide data security and staff training
as home working will continue to increase until 2010, according to a new report
on technology, media and communications released by
consultancy Deloitte today.
Deloitte predicts that advances in broadband, network security, IP
communications and other tools will allow more staff to work from home and will
encourage firms to make use of contract workers located anywhere in the world.
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Deloitte partner David Tansley said many IT-related problems at work are
solved thanks to verbal advice and on an ad-hoc basis by colleagues, and so do
not come to the attention of IT staff. So when staff are allowed to work outside
the office the burden on helpdesk staff can unexpectedly rise.
"The technology for delivering an office environment to people’s homes is
becoming simpler and more reliable,” Tansley added. "But because you don't have
your colleagues around to tap on the shoulder [when working from home], some
organisations are experiencing [a rise in] trivial helpdesk calls."
Tansley said firms could either invest more in structured IT training, employ
more technically literate staff, or hope the problem is a short-term difficulty
that will pass.
Home workers are also more likely to use their own software and tools,
creating the potential for confidential data to go leave the enterprise network
perimeter, Tansley added. IT managers must therefore enforce strict rules to
guard equipment and ensure security of company information.
"When that data [moves] onto home PCs and other storage devices, [IT
managers] must ask questions as to what level of data risk it's carrying,"
Tansley argued. "The Catch-22 is that while there are many things making IT
support of remote working easier, there is also an increasing likelihood that
the employees are contravening IT policy [at home]."
Deloitte also forecast that more firms are likely to use offshore services to
get access to higher quality workers, rather than merely to reduce costs in
areas such as IT and research and development. However, before outsourcing, IT
managers should carefully consider the impact on their department and the risk
of skill shortages, Tansley warned.
"IT departments are getting smaller and offshoring and outsourcing [is
growing], but firms are underestimating the size of teams that they need [to
retain] to manage the interface with the outsourcer," Tansley said. "We also see
IT departments don't provide training programmes to give their IT professionals
[the skills] to fill new roles, and they are struggling to recruit from
elsewhere."
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