Intro: Expectations and realities聽
The hype around the Internet of Things (IoT) - the system of smart devices capable of communicating and sharing rich data over wireless networks - has been building for years, and it鈥檚 easy to understand why. Rarely has a technology encompassed, and promised, so much for businesses. With the right combinations of connectivity and automation, a company can track- and even control- assets remotely, and vastly extend its ability to reach customers or smooth supply chains.聽
Even amid the pandemic, while investment in the IoT is expected to slow, it continues to rise, led in part by health applications like bedside telemetry. According to research firm IDC, after reaching $742 billion this year, global IoT spending is tipped to bounce back to double-digit expansion in 2021, and post a robust 11.3% compound annual growth rate for the 2020-2024 period.聽
Yet the track record of IoT indicates the enthusiasm should be tempered with caution. By some estimates nearly a third of IoT projects fail to make it past the proof of concept stage, mainly due to costs or confusion around the .
Reasons for IoT Failure in POC
With any IoT project there鈥檚 potentially a lot at stake, particularly when it comes to investment and security. That makes it critical that IoT implementations are assessed rigorously, planned meticulously and connect not just a few devices, but directly to business goals.聽
This edition of Perspectives will act as a guide to the wide and, at times, challenging world of IoT - how to decide whether it鈥檚 the right fit for your enterprise, how to overcome the problems that typically accompany IoT implications, and how to ensure it pays dividends in terms of business efficiency and acceleration.
i. Establishing a business case聽聽
锘縎trong interest in IoT is due in no small part to the high-profile success stories. Early examples of manufacturers connecting environments to boost quality control and smooth supply chains have been joined by cases of companies applying IoT to extend services in compelling new ways - take machinery maker 鈥檚 push into smart agriculture, or telco 鈥檚 foray into home security.聽
Innovative young companies like UK-based Mysense, which uses connected devices and AI to improve home care for the elderly, show these achievements aren鈥檛 limited to large firms - and that in the right context, the impact of IoT can be tremendous. One survey by , of enterprises with IoT initiatives underway, found a significant majority had managed to leverage the IoT to expand services to customers and enter new business lines.
Of enterprises with IoT initiatives:
For all the potential of IoT to take enterprises to new places, particularly when starting out, it鈥檚 vital that any would-be adopter spend time defining the specific existing business problem or need an IoT project is designed to address.聽
鈥淭he biggest challenge with IoT is that the concept is so broad, businesses may not know exactly how they can benefit from it,鈥 says Chen Zhu, IoT Director, China at 黑料门. 鈥淭he first step is to find the right problem. We鈥檝e seen a lot of companies waste money on trying to overcome the wrong ones.鈥
鈥淭he biggest challenge with IoT is that the concept is so broad, businesses may not know exactly how they can benefit from it. The first step is to find the right problem.鈥
Chen Zhu
IoT Director, 黑料门 China
In other words, IoT shouldn鈥檛 be a solution in search of a problem - as was arguably common a few years ago, when, as 黑料门 Principal Developer, Michael Fait, recalls, makers of consumer goods were busily installing WiFi modules in everything from toothbrushes to sausage fryers. 鈥淭he IoT isn鈥檛 just connecting devices,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 building systems with connected devices that have a specific purpose.鈥澛
So how does an enterprise identify an area of IoT opportunity? These will inevitably vary depending on the nature of the business, as well as its technological readiness, but there are a few telltale indicators to look out for:聽
Is the IoT right for me? A business checklist
* The business is facing challenges managing a significant number of - or significantly complex - physical assets聽
鈥淲hen we think about what kind of companies can benefit most from IoT, it鈥檚 generally those who have a lot of physical assets or locations,鈥 says Zhu. 鈥淚n the past, sensing or managing 10,000 branches globally would be very difficult. If you really want to know what鈥檚 happening in them at any given time, connecting them through the IoT can make that possible. You鈥檙e able to monitor inventories, infrastructure, all the assets in those premises without the need to conduct physical inspections.鈥澛
Especially initially, 鈥淚oT solutions were often targeted towards very easy use cases - devices with a single embedded computer,鈥 says Stefanie Grewenig, Lead Developer at 黑料门. 鈥淏ut what we鈥檙e seeing, especially in the automotive industry, is the need to connect and manage products with a lot of powerful computers. That鈥檚 a very different use case. So while there鈥檚 a lot of IoT support out there, for manufacturers with complex products, it鈥檚 not always useful, and getting value out of the IoT will require quite a lot of work.鈥澛
* The business (or its customers) would clearly benefit from the ability to maintain an asset or product remotely聽
Automating the reporting of maintenance issues and enabling fixes to be delivered from a distance is one of the main ways the IoT can be applied for relatively quick gains.聽
鈥淢aintenance causes very big logistical problems,鈥 says Zhu. 鈥淔or example, if you鈥檙e scaling to more locations and having problems with certain servers, in the past you had to send someone into the field to do the diagnostics. That drastically lowers efficiency, and the feasibility of services. But if the IoT gives you access to current and historical data about the growth and operations of different machines, you can use that to identify patterns and track problems, and improve your operations and efficiency.鈥
* Connecting devices enables the collection of useful information that would otherwise be time-consuming or impractical to source
Kevin Ashton, a technologist generally credited as coining the term Internet of Things, pointed out computers are generally far better than humans at capturing data, but need people to put them in a position where they鈥檙e sufficiently to the physical world to do so. Given the importance of data-based decision making to modern digital businesses, once those connections are made, great things can happen.聽
Fait has seen cases where the IoT automated the collection and reporting of data from a critical transportation system that previously had to be painstakingly gathered and delivered manually; and where a maker of warehouse vehicles was able to connect the products it sold to track and better understand usage on a daily basis - an ability that can inform everything from preventative maintenance to future product design.聽
鈥淎ny time you can connect a physical device to an IoT ecosystem that allows you to get information that would otherwise be very tedious to collect, you might have a business case for IoT,鈥 Fait says.
鈥淎ny time you can connect a physical device to an IoT ecosystem that allows you to get information that would otherwise be very tedious to collect, you might have a business case for IoT.鈥
Michael Fait聽
Principal Developer, 黑料门
* Connecting devices to an ecosystem creates direct benefits for - or extends services to - the end-customer聽
With the IoT paving the way for more visibility over the business and greater access to data, companies are presented the opportunity to draw on new insights to improve outcomes for customers - and even foster new revenue streams.聽
Grewenig cites the case of a firm 黑料门 has worked with, that sells smart meters to help consumers monitor and optimize their electricity usage. It quickly realized the data collected by the meters could serve far more purposes than originally intended, from measuring the usage of specific appliances - and flagging when they were due for refills or replacements - to detecting irregularities in electricity consumption that could be a sign of someone in the home in distress.聽
鈥淵ou could subscribe to your grandmother鈥檚 smart meter if you鈥檙e worried, and it would, for example, detect if someone switches on the light and never switches it off, and send you an alarm because something may have happened,鈥 she explains. 鈥淭his isn鈥檛 an obvious IoT use case that鈥檚 directly related to the core business, but was made possible through connecting the electricity meter to the internet and understanding the data better.鈥
ii. Design and implementation聽
Ensuring an IoT project serves a distinct and tangible business goal or customer outcome is the first step to overcoming one of the biggest challenges facing IoT projects - a lack of business buy-in and leadership. A study by networking equipment giant, , identified collaboration between IT and the business, and a technology-focused culture driven by the leadership and executive sponsorship, as the most critical factors in the success of IoT projects, beating out even domain expertise.
Top Factors Behind Successful IoT Projects:
鈥淲e wish (the IoT) was only a tech issue,鈥 Fait says. 鈥淭o make a smart IoT ecosystem, so the user has a positive experience and you have a good flow of features and data, a lot of things have to come together - the designers, the hardware people, software, manufacturing. What we see in a lot of companies is strict divisions between the departments, with hierarchies and politics, when what you need is a cross-functional collaboration journey.鈥澛
The automation that IoT enables also isn鈥檛 always well received - especially among those responsible for manual processes and oversight that automation may alter or phase out, whether due to simple risk aversion or fears of obsolescence. This can be addressed by taking steps to adopt technology in a transparent and sensitive way.聽
鈥淪omething we鈥檝e seen throughout the projects we鈥檝e been working on, is that because there are often manufacturing timelines where everything has checkpoints and legal restrictions, or requirements that mean someone has to sign off on something at certain points of time, a high degree of automation is something they really hesitate to introduce,鈥 says Grewenig.聽聽
Another issue is that because the IoT links devices, it鈥檚 mistakenly identified as being mainly about the hardware. Yet to leverage it successfully, 鈥測ou have to become a software company, learn and understand what good software looks like and what the capabilities are,鈥 says Fait. 鈥淭he software is what adds the functionality and produces the actual benefit, not the sensor or device itself.鈥澛犅犅
Because software development is a key success factor, businesses should also be mindful of the limitations placed on the IoT by varying standards and protocols, and how these can sometimes prevent software from achieving the desired goals.聽
鈥淚n many use cases the hindrances are the boundaries between companies and different manufacturers and brands,鈥 Fait says. 鈥淭ake the smart meter example - you have the manufacturer, the electricity company, the owners or manufacturers of the household devices, and all those things have to come together and talk to each other. When the hype around IoT started everybody was talking about common standards so we could make really good ecosystems out of anything, but we haven鈥檛 seen that actually take off.鈥
鈥淚f you have a platform that is actually usable, that enables developers to deliver quickly and with confidence the solution will work as intended in the real world and will be secure, it allows the business to stop focusing on technical problems and start thinking about what they really want to get out of their IoT projects.鈥
Stefanie Grewenig聽
Lead Developer, 黑料门
By trying to reduce these complexities and working as much as possible towards standardized processes and platforms that can be used as a foundation for the creation of various IoT applications, companies can vastly accelerate the development process for software running on embedded systems, according to Grewenig.聽
鈥淒eveloper experience has nothing to do with a developer wanting to be spoiled - it鈥檚 all about speed,鈥 she says. 鈥淚f you have a platform that is actually usable, that enables developers to deliver quickly and with confidence the solution will work as intended in the real world and will be secure, it allows the business to stop focusing on technical problems and start thinking about what they really want to get out of their IoT projects.鈥澛犅犅
As they can be so complex and involve so many (literally) moving parts, it鈥檚 particularly advisable with IoT projects to stick to the time-honored principle of starting small.聽
鈥淓specially when the technologies are new, we always advise clients to start with lower-cost demonstrations or products,鈥 says Zhu. 鈥淵ou can use the results to verify your ideas and whether they really work, and take it from there. Don鈥檛 waste too much time or resources on trying to find the perfect solution from the beginning - because we often have limited knowledge of new solutions, what seems perfect may end up being the wrong thing. Start off with experiments, and repeat.鈥澛
"Don鈥檛 waste too much time or resources on trying to find the perfect solution from the beginning - because we often have limited knowledge of new solutions, what seems perfect may end up being the wrong thing. Start off with experiments, and repeat.鈥
Chen Zhu聽
IoT Director, 黑料门 China
iii. Facing up to the security challenge聽
Security is an issue that warrants special attention with IoT as there is no getting around the fact that connecting devices vastly increases the enterprise鈥檚 potential attack surface.聽
With more and more devices incorporating what are essentially powerful miniature computers, security breaches don鈥檛 just potentially expose critical data; they can have consequences in the physical world. Typical applications of IoT extend the reach of the enterprise into consumers鈥 personal lives by placing connected cameras and microphones in homes, with significant implications for privacy.聽
鈥淚n the past, maybe a company could touch you with just one finger - but in the future they鈥檒l be able to touch every corner of your life,鈥 says Zhu. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e connected at home, on the way to the office, in the office, everywhere. The lines between the physical world and the digital world are blurred.鈥澛
Research shows consumers are keenly aware of the potential vulnerabilities the IoT brings - and that their concerns are a major barrier to adoption. A global survey by Consumers International and the Internet Society found 63% of consumers see connected devices as 鈥渃reepy鈥 and that fewer than half believe these devices will and process information in a respectful way. The same study found security concerns are as strong a deterrent as price to buying smart devices.
Smart attitudes
To some extent businesses share this apprehension, with security and privacy by far the biggest concerns for companies implementing IoT, according to research by . This shows for an IoT project to be successful, security has to be a primary consideration from the very beginning.聽
鈥淪ecurity can鈥檛 be one thing you do at the end of an IoT project,鈥 says Fait. 鈥淚t has to be driven from the beginning by cross functional teams, which should also be creating different mechanisms to cope with security issues.鈥澛
Among the key principles gleaned from 黑料门鈥 experience is to always build in backups and failsafes to both enhance security and mitigate risk. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a lot to be learned from what we鈥檝e seen the manufacturers we work with do right,鈥 says Grewenig. 鈥淟ike making it possible to separate systems that critical security information flows through, and creating very elaborate hardware setups that ensure that though 鈥榦ptional鈥 systems like an entertainment system or air conditioner might fail, essentials like the brakes and airbags will always work.鈥澛
鈥淚f you look at the top vulnerabilities of IoT devices, there鈥檚 a lot of stuff that hasn鈥檛 been done on the web in the last 20 years, like setting short, standard passwords that are never changed. We have to, at the very least, apply everything we鈥檝e learned over the past couple of decades to the systems with connected devices we鈥檙e building now.鈥
Michael Fait聽
Principal Developer, 黑料门
Running through potential security scenarios is a good way to identify potential weak points and set priorities - because, as Fait points out, no business or project can address every possible weak spot. 鈥淲e spend an extensive amount of time doing threat modeling - deciding what it is we don鈥檛 want; what we need to take care of because it鈥檚 not good, but won鈥檛聽kill us; and what things we have to make sure don鈥檛 happen at all,鈥 he says.聽
Finally, amid all the focus on emerging threats and newly connected environments, enterprises shouldn鈥檛 forget to reinforce and apply old best practices.聽
鈥淚f you look at the top vulnerabilities of IoT devices, there鈥檚 a lot of stuff that hasn鈥檛 been done on the web in the last 20 years, like setting short, standard passwords that are never changed,鈥 says Fait. 鈥淲e have to at the very least apply everything we鈥檝e learned over the past couple of decades to the systems with connected devices we鈥檙e building now.鈥
OWASP IoT Top 10 List of Security Vulnerabilities
iv. The next stage of the IoT聽
When it comes to the IoT, businesses may have even more to look forward to. The rise of 5G networks could prompt a significant leap forward. According to Zhu, while the focus is usually on 5G being faster, the real payoffs will be wider coverage and lower latency, which together will allow for much greater densities of devices and connections.聽
鈥淲hat you couldn鈥檛 do in the past will become feasible,鈥 he says. 鈥淵ou can鈥檛 do genuinely real-time remote control with 4G, but (with 5G) there are application patterns that will make it possible. People really won鈥檛 have to go work in the field anymore. Because you鈥檒l be able to get VR, construct alternate realities and have real-time control, working remotely will be just like being there.鈥澛
鈥淲hat you couldn鈥檛 do in the past will become feasible. You can鈥檛 do genuinely real-time remote control with 4G, but (with 5G) there are application patterns that will make it possible. People really won鈥檛 have to go work in the field anymore. Because you鈥檒l be able to get VR, construct alternate realities and have real-time control, working remotely will be just like being there.鈥
Chen Zhu聽
IoT Director, 黑料门 China
Zhu sees this opening the door to all kinds of innovations with the potential to reduce risk and promote positive impact, whether robot-conducted cleanups of environmental contamination or remote operators taking the wheel on behalf of tired drivers. Yet these will have to be balanced with privacy, security and other considerations - factors that Fait sees limiting the industrial application of 5G-enabled IoT to some degree.聽
With 5G 鈥渢he whole smart home will evolve, and there will be a lot of solutions made possible, especially for the elderly,鈥 says Fait. 鈥淏ut if you鈥檙e a factory you don鈥檛 want to rely too heavily on connectivity for your production. Even if 5G allows you to do things faster, it鈥檚 a mobile network, and can still go down. That鈥檚 why I expect it will have a bigger impact on household devices, wearables and mobile devices.鈥澛
Grewenig, meanwhile, sees more progress on standardization as the key to unlocking more of the IoT鈥檚 possibilities.
鈥淚n the ideal world, a developer would never have to bother writing something for a particular piece of hardware. They could just write code and deploy it wherever it鈥檚 of use. Writing software for a car would be like writing applications for mobile.鈥
Stefanie Grewenig聽
Lead Developer, 黑料门
鈥淚n the ideal world, a developer would never have to bother writing something for a particular piece of hardware,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hey could just write code and deploy it wherever it鈥檚 of use. Writing software for a car would be like writing applications for mobile.鈥澛
Streamlined development processes and interoperability would pave the way for more new business models that the IoT has enabled enterprises to create and explore; at times (like in the case of the Smart meter company) almost by accident.
鈥淚 was impressed at how quickly (the startup was) able to shift their business focus,鈥 Grewenig says. 鈥淭here was the original business model where they enabled people, and then they just expanded into all these different areas like servicing appliances or elderly care, that weren鈥檛 planned in advance. None of this was pitched originally to their investors, but sometimes the best opportunities come up along the way - as long as the business is in a position to act on them.鈥
By JoJo Swords
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