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Reality is that IoT market value will be worth less than US$0.5tn globally by 2025, says Strategy Analytics

April 6, 2017

Posted by: Avadhoot Patil

IoT (the Internet of Things) undoubtedly offers significant cost savings, says Strategy Analytics, such as improved efficiency, reduced downtime, enhanced supply chain and new business opportunities. However, the market value for IoT solutions has been dramatically inflated by some analysts.

In its latest report Global IoT: A Billion not Trillion Dollar Opportunity Strategy Analytics concludes that IoT deployments remain limited and largely in trial or development phases.

Figure 1: Scaling IoT Potential vs Global IT and GDP

      2015 2025
GDP Global (US$ Trillion) $80 $102
Global IT Spend (US$ Trillion) $3.30 $4.80
Global IoT Spend (US$ Trillion) $0.12 $0.30
IoT % of Global IT Spend 3.80% 7.10%

Source: Strategy Analytics

Strategy Analytics interviewed IT decision makers across nine vertical markets in the US, UK, France, and Germany in January 2017.

The company’s key findings include:

Harvey Cohen, president of Strategy Analytics, commented, “Estimates that put the IoT market value at $3T or more have a credibility problem. Can IoT really be bigger than the entire IT industry?

The economic value potential of IoT is indeed huge, but the opportunity for suppliers of products and services is likely to be measured in $US Billions not Trillions. Nevertheless, the opportunity for professional services is attractive for firms who are seeing enterprise software sales stagnating”

Andrew Brown

David Kerr, a VP at Strategy Analytics, noted, “Claims that the IoT market has progressed from experimental to mainstream are just not supported by Strategy Analytics’ voice of the buyer data yet. IoT must compete for a share of the total IT budget; businesses and public entities move slowly and are not easily convinced by vague claims of future economic benefit.”

The analysis also concludes that many roadblocks to IoT remain including security, integration with legacy systems, proliferation of standards, privacy concerns, compliance issues, and the skill sets needed to extract value from the huge volume of data produced.

Andrew Brown, executive director of IoT, summarised, “No one vendor or supplier has all the skills needed to deliver, support, and maintain highly complex IoT solutions. Partnerships and alliances will be critical. While the opening moves have been taken we are still early in the dance.

None of the barriers are insurmountable with the right partnerships, the appropriate understanding of business motivations and requirements, and an ability to provide consistent support across hardware, software and services.”

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