Overcoming Remote Workforce Wireless Security & Connectivity Challenges During COVID-19

SYOSSET, N.Y., May 4, 2020 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ -- As COVID-19 and social distancing force businesses around the world to work from home, many challenges arise--especially as related to healthcare, business sectors and education--about connectivity, security, and technology needs. That's the word from wireless and IoT company Choice IoT Inc.'s CEO Darren Sadana, whose vast expertise in such areas shows why those having solutions ready will adapt while others risk suffering from loss and greater disruption. "Temporary hospitals, telehealth, distance learning, and work-from-home all rely on making the right choices about wireless connectivity, data security, and technology needs," Sadana says. "Without the right solutions, approaches, planning, and implementation, lives, businesses, and socioeconomic stability are all at stake."

Amidst the pandemic, 88% of organizations have either encouraged or required employees to work from home. How companies handle this sudden and major transition into working remotely will determine their survival in what is increasingly becoming the "new normal".(1)

While it's currently estimated that 75 million U.S. employees (56% of the non-self-employed workforce) hold jobs that are compatible with remote work, the wireless needs in terms of connectivity, bandwidth, and security present enormous hurdles.(2) Furthermore, studies show that 34% of employees think their companies are unprepared to implement work-from-home protocols.(3)

There are two major challenges related to this: broadband accesses and speeds have variable availability; and the surge in those online is taking a toll on download speeds from major providers. Internet traffic has increased by 40% in the U.S. while download speeds have decreased by anywhere between 5 to 31%--with dramatic increases following school closures across the country.(4)

School closures due to coronavirus crisis have impacted at least 124,000 U.S. public and private schools, affecting at least 55.1 million students.(5) That's putting a tremendous strain on home networks, with families now working and learning from home with bandwidth limits not meant for that load.

As the tip of the spear fighting COVID-19, healthcare is struggling to meet the wireless connectivity needs of temporary hospitals and the tremendous surge in telehealth services. The volume of telehealth consults have gone up several hundred percent since the pandemic struck--with some health systems reporting a staggering 500% increase in telehealth visits within the first weeks of the outbreak.(6)

Healthcare and business sectors are also being challenged by connectivity and data security in transit. A recent joint alert from U.S. and U.K. government security notes of a dramatic rise in cybersecurity attacks related to COVID-19.(7) Schools are bypassing privacy and security controls in a rush to offer online learning at the same time that the FBI issued warnings regarding increased attacker vulnerabilities to teleconferencing and online classrooms platforms.(8)(9)

Despite these and other challenges to the new normal of telehealth and remote work/education, Sadana says that home and business planning coupled with corporate, connectivity provider, and government support can head off major challenges. This includes:

    --  Ensuring home Wi-Fi networks are using the faster 5GHz network versus
        the standard 2.4GHz network.(10)
    --  Organizations determining if they need to supply their employees with
        additional bandwidth to meet application and file-sharing needs.
    --  Over 390 companies and trade associations signing the FCC's "Keep
        Americans Connected" pledge to forego service termination for
        residential or small business customers unable to pay bills due to the
        COVID-19 crisis as well as open Wi-Fi hotspots to Americans that need
        them. The FCC has also granted special temporary authority to T-Mobile,
        US Cellular, and Verizon to borrow additional wireless spectrum to
        support increased broadband usage.(11)
    --  Implementing cloud-based collaboration services for employee access to
        company applications, private databases, communications, and even email
        systems since these do not need to rely on physical, on-premise
        infrastructure.
    --  Organizations ensuring all employees use a virtual private network (VPN)
        on remote digital devices to keep communications/data secure.

According to Sadana, the glue that will hold all of this together is essential from solution providers--like Choice IoT:

"We're stepping up and doing our part by providing strong support and infrastructure to solution providers, businesses, and others to help remote hospitals, workers, and students manage connectivity and security," Sadana says. "By offering a variety of wireless plans that fit these varied needs for continuity and increased demand for broadband high speed 4GLTE, 5G, and IoT connectivity, we can reduce the load on landline broadband and also reach places that landline broadband doesn't cover."

About Choice IoT:
Choice IoT Inc. provides a wireless connectivity and management platform for IoT-based solutions providers in the consumer-facing, public, industrial, and infrastructural sectors. The company was awarded Top 50 Smartest Companies of 2018 by the Silicon Review and Channel Vision's Visionary Spotlight Awards for Top Innovation, Service Provider Enablement, and Enterprise Technology in 2019. With a business model based on ease of use and transparency, Choice IoT is dedicated to helping its customers deploy the company's solutions with maximum control and the lowest possible connectivity cost. For more information, visit http://www.choiceiot.com.

1. Gartner HR Survey Reveals 88% of Organizations Have Encouraged or Required Employees to Work From Home Due to Coronavirus, Gartner, March 19, 2020, gartner.com/en/newsroom/press-releases/2020-03-19-gartner-hr-survey-reveals-88--of-organizations-have-e
2. How Many People Could Work-From-Home, Global Workplace Analytics, 2020, globalworkplaceanalytics.com/how-many-people-could-work-from-home
3. Rebecca Corliss. Are Companies Prepared to Work From Home? OWLLabs, | March 12, 2020, owllabs.com/blog/coronavirus-work-from-home-statistics
4. Artur Bergman, Jana Iyengar. How COVID-19 is affecting internet performance," Fastly.com Blog, April 8, 2020, fastly.com/blog/how-covid-19-is-affecting-internet-performance
5. Map: Coronavirus and School Closures, Education Week, April 16, 2020, edweek.org/ew/section/multimedia/map-coronavirus-and-school-closures.html
6. Paddy Padmanabhan, How the COVID-19 pandemic is reshaping healthcare with technology, CIO March 17, 2020, cio.com/article/3534499/how-the-covid-19-pandemic-is-reshaping-healthcare-with-technology.html
7. The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), April 8, 2020, uscert.gov/ncas/alerts/aa20-099a
8. Bradley Barth. Rush to adopt online learning under COVID-19 exposes schools to cyberattacks, SC Media, April 6, 2020, scmagazine.com/home/security-news/news-archive/coronavirus/race-to-adopt-online-learning-under-covid-19-exposes-schools-to-cyberattacks/
9. Kristin Setera. FBI Warns of Teleconferencing and Online Classroom Hijacking During COVID-19 Pandemic, FBI Boston, March 30, 2020, fbi.gov/contact-us/field-offices/boston/news/press-releases/fbi-warns-of-teleconferencing-and-online-classroom-hijacking-during-covid-19-pandemic
10. TJ Donegan. "Here's how to fix slow internet while your family is quarantined , USA Today, March 19, 2020, usatoday.com/story/tech/reviewedcom/2020/03/19/heres-how-fix-slow-internet-while-your-family-quarantined/2879081001/
11. Keep Americans Connected pledge, FCC, April 2020, fcc.gov/keep-americans-connected

SOURCE Choice IOT