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June 15, 2015updated 22 Sep 2016 11:51am

IoT strategy takeoff: Top 10 things manufacturers must consider

As IoT grows in momentum, manufacturers are urged to think strategy from day one.

By Vinod

Manufacturers have to be extremely careful when developing their IoT strategy and selecting an IoT technology partner, according to Mark Lee, CCO of Intamac.

Lee said: "Asking important questions about security, reliability and customer experience from the beginning is essential in order to avoid potentially disastrous consequences in the future.

The CCO said that the most important thing to remember is to choose the IoT technology partner carefully, and then plan, test and refine the connected product for as long as is required before a manufacturer brings it to market.

Lee added: "To be left behind could be highly costly to a manufacturer at this exciting and revolutionary time for the industry."

To assess IoT strategys readiness, Leed gave manufacturers ten tips:

1. Value proposition

The IoT industry is littered with examples of gimmicky products, with tenuous business cases. The usual rules apply: ‘Does connecting the product solve a real problem it didn’t solve before it was connected or add value in some other way?’

If you are increasing productivity, adding useful functionality, reducing maintenance and repair costs, or providing something people don’t already have then chances are that you will have a solid business case and a viable connected product.

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2. Security

Remember it is your company’s brand reputation that will suffer if there are problems with security, personal data breaches or similar, not the reputation of your IoT technology provider. Contract provisions to penalise the supplier are possible but this is unlikely to fully offset the damage to your brand reputation.

As a result, you need to know that the technology and your provider has a quality reputation within the industry, and uses best practices such as encryption and locking down communication to minimise the risk of a security breach to the greatest extent possible.

3. Data

By 2016 53% of manufacturers will offer smart products, but the biggest game-changer for these companies will arguably not come from the added product value, but from the data created by the end-user.

Companies considering an IoT strategy must ensure this information is collected, and used to discover deep and meaningful insights into the end-user, their behaviours and how they use the product, to drive product development.

4. Business Model

Implementing IoT technologies also creates the opportunity to modify your current business model to incorporate services with a regular revenue stream, or potentially new markets, products or partnership opportunities for extra value services.

Make sure you have considered all the options, and have the technology in place to do so before you launch your product.

5. Scalability

While you might not need a cloud infrastructure resilient enough to cope with millions of users now, it is possible that you will in the future. How easy will it be to scale your cloud and will it still be cost effective? These questions need to be addressed from the beginning to ensure a complete rebuild is not required at a later date.

6. Reliability

It is important that your connected products work as reliably as your unconnected products. This is not only about risk of reputational damage. Depending on what the connected product is, the consequences of poor reliability could be serious (for example, a remotely controllable lock that you are unable to unlock).

Ensure you have a reliability feedback loop to confirm a product has acted upon a message when it has received it. Without this you have no way of knowing if your command (unlock/lock etc.) has been received and acted upon. The technology in your product has to work every single time without exception.

7. User install

When a consumer buys a new product they want it up and running as soon as possible, and while it may be easy to create something that technically works at proof of concept or lab stage, it can be painful for the user to set up and use in the real world if the right design steps aren’t taken. Make sure you do thorough trials of your product before launch and be open to the feedback you receive.

8. User experience

We live in a world where there ‘has to be an app for that’. Consumers want to control their technology from their smartphones and expect this functionality. However, consumers will judge you on the user experience of the app, rather than the technology itself. Have you considered building an app? And, if so which functions would be of value to include on it? Make sure the user experience is clean and simple to ensure easy usability.

9. No Internet?

People often ask what happens to IoT when there is no Internet, and it can be extremely inconvenient if simple things like turning your lights on and off won’t work because your Internet is down. This issue is pronounced in IoT security systems, when the house can effectively be blind without the Internet.

You need to ensure architecture is in place to prevent these issues. For example, Intamac’s technology features ‘distributed intelligence‘ which means its partners’ products are resilient to loss of Internet connectivity, allowing them to function autonomously.

10. Data efficiency

A significant part of the rational for connecting products is to collect and analyse data, such as diagnostics, usage or performance. It is easy to take the view ‘we will collect as much data as we can and crunch it in the cloud’, but it is important to consider the cost and other ramifications of this approach, both for the user and you.

Remember, the more data you collect, the greater the cost. It is important therefore to have an efficient data management system in place, so that only useful data is collected and that this process is intelligent and optimised.

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