IT Mobility Support Analyst at a financial services firm with 5,001-10,000 employees
Real User
Top 20
2022-08-03T20:15:11Z
Aug 3, 2022
We used BlackBerry Enterprise Mobility Suite mainly for email, access to our local internet, and other such things. Email and the internet are the primary applications.
Regional Business Manager at a consultancy with 201-500 employees
Real User
2022-01-12T16:55:24Z
Jan 12, 2022
Our use cases were only for mobile users. We had iOS and Android users for this. It was an on-prem deployment, and being in the UAE region, the concerns that were addressed with this were data privacy and data security. Data security was the most important thing, and that's why we deployed Blackberry and gave access to email, calendar, and certain enterprise applications. We were most probably using version 11.
For the use case, we are a mobility organization. Sometimes we do, because we are a reseller or end partner, also we are running on a system integration business. Almost every time we promote or doing installation in customers, so we need to check our email from mobile or our notebook but we cannot do that on our site laptop. We BYO there.
Learn what your peers think about BlackBerry Enterprise Mobility Suite. Get advice and tips from experienced pros sharing their opinions. Updated: November 2024.
* Mobile device management for 400 business owned iOS devices in Canada. * Container apps for secure mail, browsing, app management, and secure remote access.
Senior Adviser IT at a consultancy with 51-200 employees
Real User
2018-08-07T08:19:00Z
Aug 7, 2018
We use it for mobile device management and email and calendar on the mobile devices. It has performed very well. You get the odd device where you need to reinstall it because something is broken.
Mobility Infrastructure Specialist at Enbridge Gas
User
2018-07-14T18:42:00Z
Jul 14, 2018
We used BES UEM mainly for our regulated users to lock down devices. It provided us with extra security that we couldn’t achieve with other EMM solution.
Network Engineer at a insurance company with 1,001-5,000 employees
Real User
2018-07-09T07:53:00Z
Jul 9, 2018
The solution is secure, because it is a container. However, the way I use it is to access my emails, my calendar, and the web browser to look for work-related projects.
Mobile Product Engineer at a financial services firm with 10,001+ employees
Real User
2018-06-28T06:31:00Z
Jun 28, 2018
It's corporate. We own devices, and there are BYOD devices nowadays. We're in quite a high-security environment in the finance world, so we have to make sure that we are able to contain our data. UEM and BEMS allow us to be able to remove data from devices, when needed, and protect it.
The primary use is to get mobile access for things like email, that is the most important thing; when you're traveling or not at the campus. We use it for access to email, to the internet and to office stuff when not in the office.
technical support analyst lead at a financial services firm with 1,001-5,000 employees
Real User
2018-06-24T08:17:00Z
Jun 24, 2018
Our primary use case is mobile security and team members being able to access email and other functionality, in a secure manner. We were previously on Good Control, then we upgraded to UEM.
The BlackBerry Enterprise Mobility Suite offers five editions to meet your enterprise’s evolving mobile needs. Growth can happen quickly, and the BlackBerry Enterprise Mobility Suite is designed to provide a seamless transition to the more advanced capabilities in higher-level editions. The subscription model ensures predictable annual expenditures and eliminates upfront capital costs.
We used BlackBerry Enterprise Mobility Suite mainly for email, access to our local internet, and other such things. Email and the internet are the primary applications.
Our use cases were only for mobile users. We had iOS and Android users for this. It was an on-prem deployment, and being in the UAE region, the concerns that were addressed with this were data privacy and data security. Data security was the most important thing, and that's why we deployed Blackberry and gave access to email, calendar, and certain enterprise applications. We were most probably using version 11.
For the use case, we are a mobility organization. Sometimes we do, because we are a reseller or end partner, also we are running on a system integration business. Almost every time we promote or doing installation in customers, so we need to check our email from mobile or our notebook but we cannot do that on our site laptop. We BYO there.
We use this solution for our suite of smartphones. We have approximately 1,000 that are all Android.
We primarily use this product for all of our users.
My clients basically use the solution to manage their mostly mobile devices, and, increasingly, their desktop systems also.
Pushmail and chat group IT solutions incorporate other productivity applications.
* Mobile device management for 400 business owned iOS devices in Canada. * Container apps for secure mail, browsing, app management, and secure remote access.
We use it for mobile device management and email and calendar on the mobile devices. It has performed very well. You get the odd device where you need to reinstall it because something is broken.
We used BES UEM mainly for our regulated users to lock down devices. It provided us with extra security that we couldn’t achieve with other EMM solution.
It is for our personal mobile devices.
The solution is secure, because it is a container. However, the way I use it is to access my emails, my calendar, and the web browser to look for work-related projects.
Primary use is bring your own device scenario, not managing an iOS device, and keeping e-mails safely on our own private device.
The primary reason that we use it for is notifications.
It's corporate. We own devices, and there are BYOD devices nowadays. We're in quite a high-security environment in the finance world, so we have to make sure that we are able to contain our data. UEM and BEMS allow us to be able to remove data from devices, when needed, and protect it.
Our primary use case is the PIM, it's a personal information manager: mailbox, browsing, etc.
The BlackBerry Suite is used for mail, collaboration, instant messaging, and secure browsing.
The primary use is to get mobile access for things like email, that is the most important thing; when you're traveling or not at the campus. We use it for access to email, to the internet and to office stuff when not in the office.
Primarily for mobile device management.
Email contacts and calendaring on mobile devices.
Our primary use case is mobile security and team members being able to access email and other functionality, in a secure manner. We were previously on Good Control, then we upgraded to UEM.