From SCDigest's OnTarget e-Magazine
- March 25, 2015 -
RFID and AIDC News: Internet of Things Transforms Products from Goods to Services
New Report from Deloitte Says Growth in Market will be Strong, but Far More Spend by Business Rather Consumers for Connected Homes
SCDigest Editorial Staff
The Internet of Things (IOT) movement continues to expand, not without some promotion that borders on hype, but there is clearly much action in the space by a variety of product and services providers.
A recent report from Deloitte offers a number of predictions across several areas of technology, including an interesting look at IoT that sheds some insight into how the technology will play out in the marketplace.
SCDigest Says: |
 |
SCDigest likes this observation from Deloitte: "A connected product is no longer just a product - it is also a service."
|
|
What Do You Say?
|
|
|
|
First, Deloitte provides some statistics, and says the IoT market is growing rapidly. It predicts that in 2015, some one billion "things" will be shipped with IoT connectivity, up 60% from 2014 and resulting in an installed base of about 2.8 billion connected devices.
The size of the IoT hardware market (chips, sensors, etc.) will hit $10 billion this year, Deloitte says, but will be dwarfed the size of the services market related to this connected things, which is expected to be $70 billion. In that services number are categories such as data plans for communications to and from the devices, consulting work, data analysis services and more.
Further, Deloitte expects the hardware market to grow 10-20% annually, while the services revenue will increase to something like a 40-50% annual growth rate.
But contrary to many news reports, just a small fraction of those revenues will come from consumers creating connected homes. The vast majority instead will come from spending on the enterprise side, as businesses ramp up deployment of IoT connected products, mine the data and sell related services to other businesses.
Deloitte provides a useful example by looking at a home washing machine. An IoT connected appliance might what allow a consumer to check remotely on whether the spin cycle is done using a smart phone. Or load the clothes before they leave the house and then turn the washer on remotely later when in some areas electricity rates or lower.
Deloitte says the utility of that kind of capability is probably modest at best for most consumers. However, Deloitte argues, the value of the information that the washer generates is "enormous" to the manufacturer, not just for information about reliability and if a machine is getting ready to fail, but for real-time information about which features are actually being used and how.
"The insights revealed by this stream of data could be worth hundreds of dollars per machine over the course of its life, recouping the cost of making the IoT-enabled washing machine ten times over," Deloitte writes.
(RFID and AIDC Story Continued Below)
|