About Forrester
Forrester Research, Inc. is an independent research company that provides pragmatic and forward-thinking advice to global leaders in business and technology.

Frank is a member of Forrester's Business Technology Futures team, which serves CIOs and their business partners by predicting the long-term business impact of information technology. His research focus is on new computing platforms and consumerization, analyzing paradigm shifts in the economics of the IT industry caused by the emergence of new infrastructure technologies such as cloud computing services and virtualization, and new as-a-service business models for pricing and provisioning computing solutions.
His current focus is on the dynamic between consumer and business technology markets, the future of back-end and end user hardware in the post-PC era, and a new and emerging software platform — the personal cloud.
Frank kicked off Forrester's research on organic IT in 2002, setting a market-leading vision for shared and automated IT infrastructure. In his 14 years at Forrester, Frank has helped many vendor and enterprise clients develop and improve their strategies and marketing for taking advantage of market developments for more efficient IT infrastructure. Frank's past research also includes enterprise handheld technologies, enterprise portal technologies, application and integration servers, business intelligence, and data warehousing.
Frank joined Forrester in 1998 with two years of experience as an analyst of data warehousing and business intelligence technologies. Before becoming a technology industry analyst, he spent two years at Symmetrix, a consultancy based in Lexington, Mass., where he helped insurance industry clients use information technology to improve their core business processes. Frank developed his initial process improvement expertise with four years of work on total quality management techniques at an auto parts division of General Motors.
Frank has been widely quoted in the press, including such media outlets as BusinessWeek, The New York Times, and The Wall Street Journal. An accomplished public speaker, Frank also has delivered keynote speeches at many events, including Forrester's Technology Leadership Forum and European IT Leadership Forum.
Frank has a master's degree in management from the MIT Sloan School of Management and a master's degree from the MIT Technology and Policy Program. He also holds a B.S. in mechanical engineering from Duke University, with a second major in political science.
How Workers' Personal Cloud Services Will Link Into Enterprise Applications
Personal cloud services such as Dropbox and Evernote seem like consumer-focused apps that CIOs should block from authorized workplace use. Currently, many CIOs believe that mobile devices and...

Landscape: The Emerging Technology Playbook
Emerging digital technologies are a primary driver of business evolution and disruption. Firms are grappling with an accelerating pace of business change while also trying to make IT simpler and more...

Highly Integrated With A Risk Of Lock-In
Microsoft looks to strike three very familiar chords with the release of Office 2013: mobile, social, and cloud. Each has become table stakes for enterprise software, and in order for Microsoft to...

As Mobile Device Sales Surpass PCs, CIOs Will Need To Corral A Troika Of OS Leaders
The launch of Windows 8 is a major pivot point for Microsoft — and for IT leaders and the individuals they support. The new Windows 8 user experience (UX) and programming model will transform...

The Info Worker Population Will Grow From 555 Million To 865 Million By 2016, With Growth Markets Leading The Way
Employees that use Internet-connected computing devices for work — info workers — will trample the boundary between work and personal spheres. In this report, we summarize how it came to...

We'll Use Tablets As The Conductor For PCs, Devices, And Personal Cloud Services At Work And At Home
For a new technology that is just two years old, tablets are huge hit. For CIOs the question is — will they last and what are the long-term implications? How do tablets interact with other...

Many Workers Use Multiple Devices And Spend Their Own Money For Work Tech
The rise of mobile devices and broadband Internet access at home are driving new behaviors by information workers. Our surveys of almost 10,000 global information workers and 2,300 IT hardware...

More Than 21% Of Information Workers Use Apple Products For Work
Apple's products are much more visible in business environments than they used to be. To quantify Apple's business presence, Forrester surveyed almost 10,000 information workers — workers that...
Vendor Strategists Must Overhaul Business Units And Products Aimed At Information Workers
Execs plotting new information and communications technology (ICT) products and services face changing information worker behaviors driven by five innovations that empower users to provision and use...