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IoT projects require strong ROI business cases

16 Feb 2017
00:00
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The Internet of Things needs a standard, everyone agrees on that, but the reality is that there are simply too many players vying for their standard to dominate, and the result is the highly fragmented market we currently face.

Despite this handicap, the case for IoT projects is often good: many organizations plunging in are saving millions of dollars, or creating new opportunities and revenue streams. To avoid building systems that do not deliver returns due to the immaturity of the market, the business case return on investment has to be strong at the conception.

The reason for embarking on an IoT investment has to stand on its merits, use a suitable standard from the leading contenders, and address key questions, including whether it will solve an existing challenge, improve how you do business, or generate new income streams. If so, the risk of building a legacy system is mitigated because the outlay will be reimbursed by the solution. If the world goes on to adopt a different standard from the one you adopted, it will matter less because your solution has recouped the original investment.

Do not wait for the IoT market to mature

The IoT market fragmentation will cause many potential users of the technology to wait for further clarity and a winner to emerge. However, the many IoT alliances and their competing standards currently show no signs of reducing in number. Major technology companies, such as ARM, Cisco, IBM, Intel, PTC, and Samsung, are members of multiple alliances, including the Alliance for the Internet of Things Innovation (AIOTI), Allseen Alliance, Industrial Internet Consortium, Internet of Things Consortium, and others.

However, waiting for such clarity to emerge will forego the advantages of entering the market today, while the wait could take a decade or more. Ovum’s advice is therefore to build a business case based on the current technology status, pick a standard that has good industry support so you are not locked into a single vendor, and ensure the numbers add up within a reasonable period. The ROI should justify making the IOT investment today.

IoT and cloud-native technologies are a perfect match

The cost of building IoT infrastructure has never been cheaper, with sensor and microprocessing component costs at their lowest, and the computing requirements to run the system can exploit new-generation cloud-native technologies. For example, many IoT use cases involve responses to events, and event-driven compute cloud services are now available, such as AWS Lambda and IBM OpenWhisk, which offer low-cost computer processing without the need to spin up servers. The infrastructure is completely automated and hidden, hence its alternate name of server-less computing. Modern application architectures such as microservices are a perfect match for event-driven IOT use cases.

IoT and AI is a new opportunity

IoT can generate big data, and machine learning-based analytics is ideal for mining the data and has been a proven use case in practice for some years. However, the rise of intelligent programming with deep learning opens up further opportunities for automated intelligence. Remote systems can be better managed and controlled with intelligent systems that provide greater opportunity for IoT projects.

Deep Learning proved itself in 2016 when Google Deep Mind’s AlphaGo beat world Go champion Lee Sedol in four games to one. This AI technology trains itself to learn new skills. The combination of big data generated by IoT and advanced AI promises to transform whole industries. For example, cameras on automobiles can update global 3D maps in real time, with AI used to ensure quality control, and decide which images collated from multiple vehicles should enter the master map.

Michael Azoff is a principal analyst for IT infrastructure solutions at Ovum. For more information, visit www.ovum.com/

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