Skip to main content
Tech Radar Tech Radar Pro Tech Radar Gaming
TechRadar TechRadar the business technology experts
SG EditionSingapore
DK EditionDanmark FI EditionSuomi NO EditionNorge SE EditionSverige UK EditionUK IT EditionItalia NL EditionNederland BE (NL) EditionBelgië (Nederlands) FR EditionFrance DE EditionDeutschland ES EditionEspaña
US EditionUS (English) CA EditionCanada MX EditionMéxico
AU EditionAustralia NZ EditionNew Zealand
RSS
Sign in
  • View Profile
  • Sign out
Don't miss these
espresso 15
Monitors Best portable monitor of 2025
The Razer Blade 16 photographed for TechRadar on a white surface with plants in the background.
Gaming Laptops The best gaming laptops 2025
Back of opened lid of HP Chromebook Plus 15.6-inch on table with pink wall and plant in background
Laptops The best budget laptop in 2025: top cheap laptops our experts have tested
Dell XPS 17 (2022), one of the best 17-inch laptops, on a blue background.
Gaming Laptops The best 17-inch laptop 2025
Back of opened lid of HP Chromebook Plus 15.6-inch on table with pink wall and plant in background
Chromebooks The best student Chromebooks 2025
Lenovo ThinkPad E, Legion Pro 5i, and Aura Edition laptop on peach background with big savings text overlay
Windows Laptops Lenovo's Black Friday sale is live: I've found 7 deals that could save you up to $900 on your next laptop
Lenovo | ThinkPad P16 Gen 2
Pro Best laptop for engineering students of 2025
Windows 10 logo vs Windows 11 logo
Windows Windows 11 vs Windows 10 – the key differences
Asus ProArt P16 H7606WX
Computing Asus ProArt P16 H7606WX laptop review
A Microsoft Surface Laptop, the best Windows laptop, against a techradar background
Windows Laptops The best Windows laptop 2025
Two of the best Dell laptops set against a blue techradar background
Laptops The best Dell laptop 2025
A Dell Tower Plus on a desk
Desktop PCs The best desktop PC in 2025
Lenovo ThinkPad T16 during our review process
Pro Best laptops for programming of 2025
A Microsoft Surface laptop, HP laptop and Asus laptop on a green background
Laptops The best laptop deals in October 2025
One of the best laptop for kids picks against a techradar background
Laptops The best laptop for kids 2025
Trending
  • Best office chairs
  • Best web hosting
  • Best website builder
  • Best antivirus
  • Expert Insights
  1. Pro

10 essential features your next business laptop should absolutely have

News
By Desire Athow published 30 December 2015

Every true business notebook should take these features into account

When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works.

Introduction

Introduction

Laptops came into being because employees wanted the ability to do work on the move away from their desks, and since then new technologies have always come to the business market first, before trickling down to consumers.

This happens for two good reasons. Firstly, new technology is expensive, which is why LCD, for example, was first introduced on a business laptop. Secondly, new technology is often tested on a small sample market because it usually takes time to scale manufacturing to millions of units, and doing so allows vendors to iron out any potential issues.

At any rate, in this article we've put our thinking caps on and shortlisted 10 features that we believe all business laptops should possess.

  • Also check out our guide to the best business laptops
Page 1 of 11
Page 1 of 11
Higher resolution

Higher resolution

A lot of laptops are still sporting a screen resolution that has been around for, well, more than a decade now. 1366 x 768 pixels on a 15.6-inch panel – still a popular standard for most vendors – looks like an oddity in a market where consumers are accustomed to tablets or smartphones sporting pixel densities more than four times higher and costing a fraction of the price.

A good business laptop should come with at least a full HD resolution, one which allows it to display two Microsoft Word documents next to each other. Higher resolutions (QHD or 4K) would work on bigger displays (15.6-inch or 17.3-inch models), but we've found that the sweet spot is full HD on 13.3-inch panels, as this doesn't strain the eye too much.

Page 2 of 11
Page 2 of 11
DisplayPort connector

DisplayPort connector

A video connector? Big deal some might say. Why would a DisplayPort make it onto our list? Simply because, unlike HDMI 1.4, it does 4K. And with prices of 4K monitors falling fast, it's only a matter of years before 4K becomes the norm on your desk. And without DisplayPort, there's no 4K.

There are barely any HDMI 2.0 laptops on the market and ditto for monitors. 4K matters because it allows you to replace four full HD monitors with a single one, with the added benefit of a tidier desk (no cables, no mounting stands). In a nutshell, if you want to hack your productivity, a big 4K monitor (as pictured) is the way to go. And to get 4K on your laptop, you will need a DisplayPort connector.

Page 3 of 11
Page 3 of 11
A removable - possibly extendable - battery

A removable - possibly extendable - battery

Like high-end smartphones, a lot of the newer, trendier laptops come with non-removable batteries and since these gradually degrade over time, you can expect the average battery life of your notebook to significantly decrease within 12 months.

Now, given that the lifecycle of laptops in enterprises is usually three years, a removable battery would certainly give them a new lease of life. A removable battery also means that you can swap the default one for a much bigger power pack for added hours of productivity at any time. Laptops with embedded batteries simply do not have that option.

Page 4 of 11
Page 4 of 11
Viewing angle

Viewing angle

We frequently commute either locally or abroad and always yearn to be productive on the move. The last thing we need when writing features or replying to emails is the person sat in the neighbouring seat peeping at what we're doing. And that's why, in an era of privacy paranoia, a laptop with a very narrow viewing angle is probably better than a notebook with a wider one – even if that means you won't be able to entertain an audience with your latest presentation.

Now, what would be really useful is if a vendor could come up with a nifty way to change viewing angles at the flip of a switch…

Page 5 of 11
Page 5 of 11
Extended warranty

Extended warranty

Extended warranties exist for a reason – to provide peace of mind for the user and/or the laptop owner. Getting one that marries up with the laptop's estimated life expectancy is usually the best option.

Most vendors have a three-year warranty available that, in its simplest form, adds two additional years to the default warranty. Enhanced warranties include next business day replacement (or even within four hours) as well as covering hardware failures and accidents, always useful when on the move.

Page 6 of 11
Page 6 of 11
Legacy ports

Legacy ports

Business laptops are designed with versatility in mind given the mind-boggling array of peripherals and accessories that they're expected to connect to – from dot matrix printers to that reliable 30-year-old robotic arm.

So either get a laptop that comes with a full set of connectors (VGA or D-Sub, Ethernet and even parallel or serial ports, remember those?) or get a docking station (or a port extender) that offers them.

USB 3.1, the popularity of which is growing fast, will be able to offer higher power (up to 100W) which means that your laptops should be able to power passive port extenders without breaking a sweat.

Page 7 of 11
Page 7 of 11
Enhanced security

Enhanced security

New business notebooks are likely to be more secure than ever with fingerprint readers and an array of sensors and cameras that can visually (or otherwise) confirm the identity of the user and permissions to be granted. Intel RealSense has slowly started to percolate to enterprise products with gesture control likely to grow in importance.

Features like Wake-on-Voice will get traction and may well change the way we interact with laptops as they adopt smartphone-like capabilities such as always standby. Imagine being able to seamlessly authenticate yourself and get your computer to perform tasks without even lifting the display or touching your keyboard.

Page 8 of 11
Page 8 of 11
Say no to plastic!

Say no to plastic!

There will always be some plastic in any laptop – after all, motherboards are made of plastic. What we're referring to are the tacky, ugly, cheap-looking plastic (polycarbonate) shells that have invaded the laptop mainland, especially for entry-level business models.

Expect metal (aluminium, as seen above, or magnesium) or carbon fibre to become more popular as enterprise customers look beyond functional devices and aspire to better overall aesthetics, especially as flexible working and BYOD become the norm. You want to use something you could take on the train or open in a coffee shop. Alternatives to plastic are also stronger and, in the case of a metal chassis, act like giant heatsinks.

Page 9 of 11
Page 9 of 11
Windows 10 Pro

Windows 10 Pro

Windows 10 should be the preferred operating system for your next business laptop, not Windows 7, Mac OS X or Linux. Windows 7 entered end of mainstream support in January 2015 while OS X and Linux are simply too niche at the time of writing to make sense in an enterprise setup.

With new features like Cortana or Hello – which allows for fingerprint, facial and iris recognition – and business features like Azure AD, Client Hyper-V, BitLocker and Remote Desktop, Microsoft's newest Windows is a no-brainer, especially if you get it with a new laptop that can make the most out of it.

Page 10 of 11
Page 10 of 11
Lose the DVD drive

Lose the DVD drive

A number of business laptops still come with an optical drive, which is most likely to be a DVD writer. While the need for such a drive may arise occasionally, these are more a vestige of a distant past where silver coasters were popular and where data was still mostly shuttled between computers on CDs or DVDs.

That's no longer the case – cheap USB drives and the internet made optical media obsolete when it comes to data storage. Removing the optical drive from a laptop makes it lighter and cheaper, improves battery life and is one less component that the operating system will have to handle. So this is another no-brainer, and indeed you can always buy an external DVD drive for a tenner if you really need one.

Page 11 of 11
Page 11 of 11
TOPICS
Windows 10 Microsoft
Desire Athow
Desire Athow
Social Links Navigation
Managing Editor, TechRadar Pro

Désiré has been musing and writing about technology during a career spanning four decades. He dabbled in website builders and web hosting when DHTML and frames were in vogue and started narrating about the impact of technology on society just before the start of the Y2K hysteria at the turn of the last millennium.

Read more
A group of young professionals sitting together with their laptops on the table
The 7 most important laptop features to consider when heading back to school
 
 
A free to use image from Pexels, taken by photographer Ivan Samkov, showing a woman working on a laptop while wearing headphones
The dos and don'ts of buying a new laptop for college
 
 
Apple MacBook Pro 14 M4 (2024) REVIEW
Best laptop for working from home of 2025
 
 
Apple MacBook Air 13-inch (M4) with screen open on blue background
The best laptops 2025 tested, reviewed and rated
 
 
Student sat at a desk with a laptop in a dormitory looking at a mobile phone
AI in the classroom: the laptop specs to look out for to level up your learning
 
 
Getty Images
Haven’t replaced your laptop in a few years? Here’s how to know if it’s college-ready or time for an upgrade
 
 
Latest in Pro
Ai tech, businessman show virtual graphic Global Internet connect Chatgpt Chat with AI, Artificial Intelligence.
The AI-native generation is coming, are you ready?
 
 
An AI face in profile against a digital background.
From caution to confidence: Tackling AI obstacles with education
 
 
ChatGPT
Researchers claim ChatGPT has a whole host of worrying security flaws - here's what they found
 
 
Green hosting
Why data sovereignty is essential to help businesses prepare for impending AI regulation
 
 
Close up of a person touching an email icon.
Watch those typos - email mistakes are causing significant security issues
 
 
Microsoft Copilot
Microsoft apologizes to 365 users over confusing software tiers
 
 
Latest in News
Xpeng Land Aircraft Carrier parked on mountain top
Your own private aircraft carrier? Chinese EV-maker Xpeng's annual 2025 showcase just gave us a tantalizing glimpse of the future of transportation
 
 
Lucia and the other protagonist sit on a muscle car
Grand Theft Auto 6 delayed again, but it'll still ship in 2026
 
 
NotebookLM upgrades
You can now use Google's AI study tools for NotebookLM right up until the test starts
 
 
A laptop on a desk with the Windows 11 background on its screen.
Fed up with Windows 11's clunky right-click menu? Microsoft just dropped a hint that it could become more streamlined
 
 
This Red Dead Redemption 2 PS4 bundle is just £219.99 for Amazon Prime Day
Rockstar co-founder Dan Houser says Red Dead Redemption 3 'will probably happen' but would be sad not to be part of it
 
 
Pokémon Legends: Z-A – Mega Dimension
Pokémon Legends: Z-A Mega Dimension DLC has an official release date and the first trailer confirms new Mega Evolutions
 
 
LATEST ARTICLES
  1. 1
    Maxton Hall season 2 episodes 1-3 are now on Prime Video, and they’ve copied The Summer I Turned Pretty in the worst way
  2. 2
    Create CGI characters in 60 minutes with Autodesk Flow Studio
  3. 3
    Your own private aircraft carrier? Chinese EV-maker Xpeng's annual 2025 showcase just gave us a tantalizing glimpse of the future of transportation
  4. 4
    You can now use Google's AI study tools for NotebookLM right up until the test starts
  5. 5
    Pluribus' The Joining explained: what is it, why is Carol [spoiler], and more on the Apple TV show's big mystery

TechRadar is part of Future US Inc, an international media group and leading digital publisher. Visit our corporate site.

Add as a preferred source on Google
  • About Us
  • Contact Future's experts
  • Contact Us
  • Terms and conditions
  • Privacy policy
  • Cookies policy
  • Advertise with us
  • Web notifications
  • Accessibility Statement
  • Careers

© Future US, Inc. Full 7th Floor, 130 West 42nd Street, New York, NY 10036.

Please login or signup to comment

Please wait...