IT Risk Quantification: Turning Cyber Risks into Business Metrics
September 29, 2025
You should care because the modern enterprise no longer lives inside a single device. Your employees switch between smartphones, tablets, laptops, and desktops depending on where they are and what they are doing. For CTOs, CIOs, product managers, startup founders, and digital leaders, this presents both an opportunity and a challenge: how do you design enterprise apps that make these transitions seamless, instead of frustrating?
This article explores exactly that. You will learn what multi-device workflows mean, why they matter in today’s enterprise landscape, what design and technology strategies work best, and how to prepare for the future of device-agnostic work. By the end, you’ll have a framework to guide your own app design process.
A multi-device workflow means a process where a user starts a task on one device and continues it seamlessly on another. For example, a sales executive might review client notes on a mobile app during a commute, then finalize a proposal on a laptop at the office, and later get a reminder on a tablet at home.
In the enterprise world, these transitions happen daily. Microsoft Teams, for instance, allows you to join a meeting from your phone while traveling, then switch to your desktop without interruption. Salesforce mobile apps let you update opportunities on the go, while the web interface supports deep reporting.
These workflows don’t just make employees more productive, they also reduce cognitive friction by respecting how people naturally work across contexts.
They are important because hybrid work has turned device switching into the default, not the exception. According to Gartner, 80% of employees use more than one device daily for work. IDC reports that enterprises with optimized multi-device experiences see up to 30% productivity gains compared to those without.
Enterprises are also increasingly global, with teams collaborating across time zones and devices. If your app locks people into one device, you risk limiting adoption and frustrating users.
For digital leaders, the business impact is direct: smoother workflows mean faster execution, happier employees, and greater ROI on digital transformation initiatives.
You design by focusing on continuity, consistency, and context. Continuity means your app remembers where the user left off. Consistency ensures that core functions and design language look familiar across devices. Context means adapting the experience to the strengths of each device.
Best practices include:
Apple’s Handoff feature is a prime example. It allows you to start writing an email on your iPhone and pick it up on your Mac instantly. In the enterprise space, Slack has mastered state sync by ensuring conversations stay updated no matter the device.
The most common pitfalls are inconsistent user experiences, fragmented features, and poor offline handling.
Case in point: early versions of enterprise apps like SAP’s mobile tools suffered from clunky, stripped-down versions that discouraged mobile usage. The lesson is clear: treat every device as a first-class citizen.
You future-proof by designing for device agnosticism, modularity, and emerging interfaces. Devices will keep changing, from foldables to wearables to AR glasses. The goal is to make workflows that survive these shifts.
Future-proofing strategies:
Enterprises like IBM and Oracle are already experimenting with AR-enabled apps for field technicians, letting them start diagnostics on a tablet and continue with AR overlays on smart glasses.
Several trends will dominate:
By 2030, enterprise workflows won’t just span multiple devices, they will span multiple realities: physical, digital, and augmented.
If you design enterprise apps for multi-device workflows, you are not just solving a usability problem, you are shaping how modern work itself happens. In a world where the boundary between devices is vanishing, your challenge is to make that transition invisible.
Qodequay positions itself as a design-first company that leverages technology to solve human problems, with technology serving as the enabler. By approaching enterprise app design through the lens of human workflows, not just devices, you ensure that your solutions remain relevant, adaptive, and transformative.