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Beyond the Repository: Mobile Content Management Is Here

Author: Jim Lundy                                                                    Date: October 20, 2014
Topics: Mobile, Content Management                        Research Note Number: 2014-42

Issue: What technologies and architectures make up a mobile ecosystem?
Issue: How is content management evolving?

Summary: Mobile content management goes beyond file sharing and sync, providing rich ways to manage and secure content and collaborate with content on the move.


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Documents, broadly defined, are the primary mechanism that people use to share information and conduct business. In recent years, the way this information has been transmitted and shared has changed. The limits of how content can be shared inside the enterprise, combined with a control-oriented culture by IT has given rise to content management in the cloud, or what Aragon Research calls mobile content management (MCM).

While enterprise content management (ECM) is about managing what are often the most critical documents in the enterprise, the average user often doesn’t have access to the ECM repository. Email has been the go-to way to distribute content. File sharing and synchronizing utilities have become popular, but users need to do more than just share files. Mobile content management (MCM) makes content more usable on mobile devices – where people spend their time – but it does much more than that.

Mobile Content Management Defined

MCM does more than just manage content; it also provides security and access control, while allowing collaboration around it (see Note 1). Much of this takes place in the cloud, which is what makes it uniquely suitable for mobile users working on disparate platforms from distant locations. A lot of what is now MCM was born as a convenience utility for consumers with mobile devices that do not offer a conventional file directory system. However, many MCM providers have moved on from a consumer focus to target business users, who now have the clout and the budgets to make their own technology decisions and have helped to fuel the growth of MCM. In a cloud-enabled world, these empowered users don’t have to make large capital investments; they can rent the storage and content management they need on a month-to-month basis.

MCM feature sets are converging from a variety of perspectives:

Collaboration

At the heart of MCM is what Aragon calls content in context. Every business document plays a specific role in a specific business process, which constitutes its context. This context is crucial for collaborative interactions between colleagues and external parties.

Email remains the baseline mobile collaboration tool, but its security remains an issue, and many enterprises are shifting to more secure email clients that can securely access enterprise networks and mail servers. Many MCM providers lack more advanced collaboration features such as real-time, but we expect that to change via partnerships and possible acquisitions to integrate collaboration capabilities.

Document Editing and Annotation

Mobile document editing offers a simple, fast and easy way for workers on the go to create or update a document that may be mission-critical. Annotation, which may be one of the most-used features, lets team members comment on each other’s work. Mobile users can now choose from a robust set of mobile editors (e.g. Apple, Google, Microsoft) and many may opt for the native editor. For workers who don’t need a high-end editor, an MCM editor may be a good value.

Securing Content in a Mobile World

Giving users access to apps and data through their mobile devices is great for productivity and improves enterprise agility. People increasingly connect with their email and essential business processes at any time and place. A critical issue for business is ensuring that sensitive business information is secured and protected. Only authorized users should have access to enterprise resources, and even they may need to be governed by the time and place they are using it. Business data stored on mobile devices must be protected when a device is lost, stolen or otherwise compromised. Enterprises need reliable ways to secure and control business data on mobile devices, especially those of BYOD users who personally own and control their equipment.

Whether public or private, a secure content cloud has become a standard MCM feature. Through a secure cloud, enterprises can control what content gets distributed to which users, and can ensure that only the most up-to-date content is in the hands of mobile users. Time or location controls on the secure cloud can allow time-sensitive content to be automatically updated or wiped and prevent critical data such as financials from being accessed from outside business locations.

Document-Centric Security

A key concern for enterprises in managing mobility and mobile access is controlling access to and use of corporate information. Embedding or wrapping documents themselves with security policies and controls can protect sensitive files regardless of where they are downloaded. Providing multiple levels of security protection for documents on mobile devices is the new way forward. The ability to control access to individual documents on any type of device is becoming a de facto standard in MCM.

Preview capability (viewing without downloading), watermarking, and the ability to recall documents are also emerging as standard features in the MCM suite. Besides recall, being able to wipe or selectively wipe content from a compromised device is also important. Finally, being able to manage encryption keys provides enterprises with a higher level of control. The features we see as important include:

Rights Management and Encryption

In an era of increased IP theft, rights management for content has surged back into the picture. MCM providers offer rights management at various levels. Many MCM providers focus on encryption, but rights management combined with encryption is a better long-term strategic approach.

Data and documents can be encrypted, and access to any data can be restricted to apps selected by the enterprise. The risk of leaking sensitive information, either innocently or with intent, is high on mobile devices. Enterprises need to define policies regarding what information can or cannot be sent via email, what content can be copied from the secure container to other locations, and what data can be blocked from the print and copy functions of mobile devices.

The Impact Of The Cloud

Innovation around MCM and mobile computing will continue to accelerate, particularly at the intersection of apps, repositories and the content itself. Enterprises that deploy mobile systems should inventory their content and collaboration needs, evaluate their technology providers and look for synergies that they can exploit in the emerging cloud-centric content and collaboration ecosystem. Many enterprises have been reluctant to move their content to the cloud, but that is changing, particularly since many have shifted their email to the cloud over the last five years.

Figure 1 shows three tiers of MCM functionality. See Note 2 and our accompanying Research Note 2014-43, Three Tiers of Mobile Content Management for more details.

Figure 1: The Three Tiers of Mobile Content Management

Federating with Enterprise Content Management

Enterprises use enterprise content management (ECM) to manage and secure their mission-critical content. It combines document management, records management, paper scanning and imaging, basic collaboration (discussions) and archiving with high levels of security, scalability and reliability. Most ECM systems today are on-premises. As cloud-based ECM options emerge, enterprises should evaluate their on-premises systems, see how they compare with the new services, and explore the possible advantages of moving them to the cloud.

Succeeding with Mobile Content Management

For many enterprises, the first step is developing a strategy to consolidate the multiple repositories they have today. Many enterprises have up to five different ECM systems, often with limited interoperability or scalability beyond their original missions. Even though they represent huge capital investments, their limitations can leave them underused or restrict them to narrow applications in local silos. Meanwhile, other content and collaboration needs may be going unmet. In contrast, cloud-based solutions offer simplicity, fast deployment, ease of use, access from a wide range of devices and the ability to add users both inside and outside the enterprise.

In the future, Aragon expects traditional ECM vendors to acquire many of the emerging MCM providers. This is no surprise. ECM providers have taken steps to acquire specialists in nearly every content management category that has arisen, to ensure client renewals by offering the full range of content services that their clients require.

Planning Assumption: Fifty percent of the major MCM providers will be acquired by the end of 2016.

Aragon Advisory

Bottom Line

Mobile content management is all about securing content outside of the repository while also enabling people to get and share content quickly and easily. Enterprises need to provide MCM for their knowledge workers to facilitate the flow of information inside and outside of the enterprise.


NOTES


Note 1: The Seven Features of MCM


Note 2: Three Tiers of Mobile Content Management



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