IoT deployments play a vital
role in many enterprises' digital transformation strategies, yielding benefits
such as productivity gains, costs savings, and achieving environmental
sustainability goals. As a result, enterprises continue to increase their
spending on IoT solutions and are broadly expanding deployments, according to
the latest Omdia
Internet of Things (IoT) Enterprise Survey. The results showed that enterprises
are deploying, or are in the process of rolling out, IoT solutions and that 95%
of respondents expect to see measurable benefits from IoT within two years of
deployment.
"While some tech giants have
scaled back their IoT efforts, enterprises are embracing IoT and seeing remarkable
results," said John Canali, IoT Principal Analyst, Omdia and author of the report. "In fact, enterprises are very forward looking in
incorporating new technologies like 5G, fixed wireless access (FWA), and
eSIM/iSIM technology."
Omdia's survey results reveal
that while LTE (4G) remains a popular connectivity bearer, over 70% of enterprises
are planning to use 5G connectivity. Meanwhile, eSIM/iSIM technology have or
will be adopted by nearly 90% of enterprises over the next two years. This
technology will enable enterprises to better manage costs and allow them to
renegotiate future connectivity tariffs.
Omdia notes that the survey
results suggest very positive growth in the deployment of IoT solutions and
suggests there will be a positive knock-on effect for players across the IoT
value chain, however there will be increased competition. Enterprises are
increasingly reliant on vendors and partners, given that deploying IoT
solutions is often complex and requires a diverse array of skills to succeed.
Many enterprises cited internally obtaining the relevant resources and skills as
a major hurdle.
"Our survey suggests that
there are a multitude of opportunities ranging from hardware, software,
connectivity, services. However, security remains at the forefront of
enterprise concerns and vendors must be able to not only offer secure products
and services but also be able to effectively integrate into broader solutions.
Vendors that fail to deliver secure solutions will find themselves locked out
of this growing market," added Andrew Brown, IoT Practice Lead at Omdia.