The reason for business is to make money, and once engaged in the process, the usual trajectory for successful companies is expansion and growth. Today, it is hard to imagine being able to function in the market place without the use of information technology. For any company that is using computers, the need for desktop management is absolute.
The term certainly sounds like an effort to get employees to adopt a clean desk approach to office work, but that would be erroneous. The goal is to create a network of computers that allow employees to interconnect and communicate to foster the synergy of group approaches to problems. The network also serves to eliminate a fair number of meetings, which tend to increasingly eat productive hours as the number of employees increase. Setting up a system that allows the employees to communicate with one another and their clients from anywhere and at anytime makes them much more productive and efficient. Information can be transmitted literally instantly to all employees simultaneously. Individuals who are on a trip, on holiday or sick can still get the information on mobile devices or at the latest when they first step back into their office. One of the drawbacks to the new dependence on information technology is the cost of software and the licenses for multiple computer use. There is little a company can do as the programs need regular updating in order to stay current and to avoid security problems. The least expensive way to run a network is to have a central hub from which all the computers can be remotely cared for. The business and employees benefit from the ability to stay in touch with and service clients and accounts from anywhere without traveling, and when they do have to travel, they remain in contact with the home office for support and direction. The gain from the technology, however, can be lost without qualified personnel dedicated to keeping it running smoothly. Most of us have computers at home, so a relative skill level in dealing with hardware and software is a common enough ability, but so too is the realization that sometimes these supposedly self installing programs do not exactly pan out. The software makers do their best, but there are simply too many possible installation configurations for them to anticipate all of them, and sometimes they cause conflicts. The time it takes to correct these conflicts can cost a lot of man hours, and if they occur at the wrong time, they could cost much more.
This method of maintaining the information system also helps preserve the integrity of this process, which is often sabotaged by well meaning and hard working employees who mean well. Invariably employees have experimented with a wide variety of programs on their home systems, and often grow quite fond of specific capabilities. In the attempt to either use the same productivity in the office or the desire to share their favorite program, they introduce these favorite programs to the work system.
When employees introduce software from home, they risk circumventing preventive efforts by the desktop management team to keep malware out of the system. It is complicated enough to fight the constant attacks from the external world of the internet. Protecting from intrusions within the firewalls and other protective measures is difficult, costly and inefficient and a bane to the technicians working hard to keep the system running.
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