IBM will unveil its enterprise mobile software strategy to industry analysts on Wednesday as part of a grand opening of a new software development laboratory in Littleton, Mass.
The strategy will involve IBM services and IBM software, a company spokeswoman said, without explaining further. Some new initiatives will involve middleware software used to support mobile users, but the crux of the event will be about collaboration and “using mobile devices to manage your business,” she said.
Several analysts said they welcomed IBM’s input, given some concerns about IBM’s direction in the mobile space, especially when compared with the company’s historic role in many prominent software products, such as Websphere for application integration that first appeared in 1998, and Lotus software products including Notes for e-mail that started with desktop computers in the 1980s.
Today, with the emergence of multiple smartphone operating systems such as the iPhone OS and Android, and their tens of thousands of smartphone apps, the timing would seem right for IBM to play a bigger role than it has, several analysts told Computerworld.
“IBM, except for its professional services side, has lost its way in mobile,” said Jack Gold, an analyst at J. Gold Associates.
He said the implementations of WebSphere inside enterprises has been costly, and a partnership with Research in Motion to extend Notes e-mail and instant messaging to BlackBerry users through Lotus Notes Traveler and Sametime, had only achieved limited success.
“IBM does not have a strong presence in mobility on a standardized product basis and must modernize to support multiple [mobile] platforms to gain share,” Gold said. “It has to be seen as offering a compelling solution to the market at a reasonable cost, but has a lot of work to do.”
Ken Dulaney, an analyst at Gartner, said that given IBM’s pivotal role in creating landmark software for decades, it “should be doing much better than they are in mobility.”
He said IBM has been late with mobile products and has made promises it hasn’t kept, but he didn’t elaborate.
Neither of the analysts have been briefed so far about IBM’s expected announcement, but said it could involve Websphere application integration for mobile devices or extension of Lotus Quickr, Lotus Sametime or Lotus Connections.
Gold said that one highly speculative guess is that IBM could be entering the business of outsourcing the hosting of mobile apps.
Carl Howe, an analyst at Yankee Group, said that he expects IBM to announce more tools and apps for the IBM Lotus series, along with more mobile development tools for its Eclipse software.
Howe was more generous in judging IBM, noting the company doesn’t make smartphones or provide an OS for them. “Their mobility strategy is entirely about software and services for mobility, which is higher up the value stack” than an OS.
“If Apple , Google and RIM are in the mobile horse race, then IBM is running the stables that keeps the horse fed and watered. They get paid no matter which horse wins,” Howe said.
The IBM spokeswoman said Wednesday’s announcement follows the company’s efforts in mobile software for many years and would “reassure any attendees of IBM’s continuing interest in the mobile software space.”