Ten per cent of manufacturers already have an established Internet of Things (IoT) project underway, while 22 per cent are either running a pilot or planning a project within the next 12 months, a report said.
Well over a third (38 per cent) claim to be investigating its potential, according to the findings of a recent survey by Infor, a leading provider of beautiful business applications specialized by industry and built for the cloud.
The research also reveals that IoT is the single biggest business priority for one in ten manufacturers across the world right now, with 28 per cent putting it in their top three.
The benefits of IoT are well documented, with new revenue opportunities based on the monetization of information billed as one of the most exciting. However, it seems the majority (55 per cent) of the manufacturers polled as part of the research view cost savings from greater operational efficiencies as the greatest opportunity associated with the initiative, with a third envisaging competitive advantage through additional revenue from new services, the study said.
Specific benefits, according to the research, are likely to come through productivity, which topped the list according to 20 per cent, followed by better insight and decision-making (15 per cent); greater utilization of equipment and machinery (15 per cent); new services (11 per cent); and new revenue streams (13 per cent).
However a lack of ownership is impeding adoption with respondents citing a total of nine different functions as the primary drivers of IoT. These span a range of roles from the executive team (31 per cent) and IT (28 per cent), to marketing (5 per cent); manufacturing operations (13 per cent) and facilities (6 per cent). When asked about challenges to IoT implementation, respondents pointed to a lack of skills, unclear benefits and cost as the primary culprits.
"Manufacturers, challenged by the constant need to improve productivity, see the competitive advantage available to them through exploiting IoT technologies. This research confirms that over half of manufacturers recognize the potential and are either piloting projects or actively investigating use-cases," said Andrew Kinder, VP Industry & Solution Strategy at Infor.
"We expect more of these pilot projects to evolve into production-ready deployments over the next 18 months - which should send a warning message to the 43 per cent of respondents who have yet to recognize the value."
"But with only 10 per cent claiming complete readiness - there is clearly an untapped opportunity ahead for companies with the right vision,” Kinder explained.
“Our advice would be to look at the device data you are already collecting - most plant equipment is already instrumented - and ask what questions could you answer if only you could collect it, apply analytics and distribute the insight quickly to the right decision maker? Even better, who outside your organization would want to purchase the information only you can provide? Then have this conversation with your technology provider - the pieces are all available to turn it into a reality,” he concluded. – TradeArabia News Service
IoT making strong inroads into manufacturing
Kinder ... the transition to IoT is well underway<br>for manufacturers.