Despite Windows dominance and a surge in Windows 7 enterprise upgrades, corporate use of Internet Explorer continues to decline due to more workplace consumerization that emphasizes choice and an increase in browser-agnostic apps. A new study of corporate operating system and browser trends by Forrester Research reveals both good news and bad news for Microsoft.The good news is that Windows is still the powerhouse OS in the enterprise, running on almost 88 percent of corporate PCs. In addition, Windows 7 is slowly becoming the new standard, running on 21 percent of corporate PCs, according to Forrester.The bad news? Internet Explorer is on a steady decline in the corporate world as Firefox, Google’s Chrome, and Apple’s Safari take favor. SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe The Forrester study — “Corporate Desktop Operating System And Browser Trends, Q2 2010 To Q2 2011” — analyzed more than 400,000 client PCs across 2,500 companies over the past year. IE’s overall market share took a hit as firms replaced legacy Windows XP systems that were running IE6, and abandoned IE6 not just for IE8 but also Firefox, Chrome and Apple’s Safari (if the move was to a Mac). IE still dominates the corporate browser landscape with almost 59 percent market share. But that is a decrease of 3 percent from a year ago. Although Firefox’s overall corporate market share has also decreased (from 22 percent to 18 percent), Firefox users are more quickly embracing new releases of Firefox with 14.4 percent of the market using Firefox 3.6 versus 1 percent using Firefox 3.5. In contrast, many more corporate workers are using IE7 than IE8 (34.4 percent to 19.4 percent respectively). Much of Firefox’s share loss is coming from Google’s Chrome browser, states Forrester.“Over the last few years alternative browsers have been taking share from IE, that spot has been largely dominated by Firefox,” says Forrester analyst and report co-author Christian Kane. “But in the last year we’ve seen some of Firefox’s and IE’s market share going to Chrome.” Google’s Chrome browser has shown by far the most growth in corporate use, rising from 8.8 percent market to 14.1 percent in the past year. “Chrome’s steady growth in corporate browser market is thanks largely to tech savvy workers clamoring for more control over the applications they run on their work computers,” the Forrester report states. As IT managers build applications that are compatible across all browsers, the Forrester report predicts that enterprise use of Chrome and other IE alternatives will only increase in the coming years.Even the corporate use of Apple’s Safari browser has increased in the past year — from 6.2 percent to 8.8 percent — despite being confined to devices running Mac OS X and iOS and often competing against Windows virtual machines on a Mac that runs IE, Firefox and Chrome.Safari’s boost in corporate usage can be attributed to the “consumerization of IT” and BYO (bring your own) device programs where empowered workers expect Mac and iOS support in the workplace. In response, enterprise IT groups are being pressured to “develop clear guidance concerning their Apple support — or lack thereof — and ensure that their client management and security tools can natively support non-Windows platforms.” 5 Reasons Why CIOs Can’t Ignore Consumerization of IT BYOPC Could Make Sense for Your IT ShopInternet Explorer’s ongoing dip in corporate use is part of a decline that began two years ago when the browser had approximately 80 percent market share, says Forrester analyst Benjamin Gray. “While it’s unrealistic to expect that Microsoft would continue that kind of browser dominance,” says Gray, “the recent decline is just further proof that IT managers are building browser-agnostic client computing strategies that let employees choose a browser that matches their own preferences.”Shane O’Neill covers Microsoft, Windows, Operating Systems, Productivity Apps and Online Services for CIO.com. Follow Shane on Twitter @smoneill. 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