Industryweek 13554 How Deal Iot

How to Deal with IoT? Play or Be Played

Oct. 20, 2016
An IBM exec exhorts companies to claim the edge where value is created or risk getting their lunch eaten by competitors, both familiar and unexpected.

Rob Risany, Global Innovation Executive, IBM, can’t think of many industries that aren’t facing massive disruption around the Internet of Things (IoT).

Speaking at IoT Innovation Day, an event sponsored by PrismTech, ADLINK, IBM, and Intel, Risany emphasized the diabolical challenge companies are wrestling in the era of IoT: Many of the disrupters are going to come from unexpected places and directions.

“Historically you knew who your competitors were, and you defended your business by creating products and channels to capture as much value as possible,” said Risany. “Suddenly in the world of disruptive IoT, your customers are your suppliers, and your suppliers are your competitors, and your competitors are your customers or someone you never even heard of. The challenge is to figure out which is which.”

To remain viable in this era, Risany said that companies today need to understand how value is created at the edge and leverage a foundational platform to connect to it and get insight from the data.

He pointed to the simple example of the taxi business. Historically, the value was simply getting a rider from Point A to Point B. Uber changed all that and created a new value proposition by leveraging the capabilities of the phone to collect, transmit and share data ranging from location tracking to cost of the ride.

“Uber is a great example of how analytics gives you the context of how that edge behaves and how it fits into the context of the things it interacts with, giving you new points of control and new disruptive capabilities,” said Risany. “In essence, data about your product can become more valuable than your product itself.“

But it ain't easy.

“Companies know what they do and they know in the disruption created by the IoT they have to redefine what they do, but they know they just can’t step completely away from their core competency,” said Risany.

So who exactly is finding success with the IoT? It’s ironic, but many government organizations, considered to be veritable rats’ nests of bureaucracy, have emerged as early adopters. Many city officials, for example, have successfully opened their data streams to communities of developers who are creating apps to help them run their cities more efficiently.

Read More

IOT Institute is, like IndustryWeek, powered by Penton, an information services company.

Popular Sponsored Recommendations

Global Supply Chain Readiness Report: The Pandemic and Beyond

Sept. 23, 2022
Jabil and IndustryWeek look into how manufacturers are responding to supply chain woes.

Empowering the Modern Workforce: The Power of Connected Worker Technologies

March 1, 2024
Explore real-world strategies to boost worker safety, collaboration, training, and productivity in manufacturing. Emphasizing Industry 4.0, we'll discuss digitalization and automation...

How Manufacturers Can Optimize Operations with Weather Intelligence

Nov. 2, 2023
The bad news? Severe weather has emerged as one of the biggest threats to continuity and safety in manufacturing. The good news? The intelligence solutions that build weather ...

How Organizations Connect and Engage with Frontline Workers

June 14, 2023
Nearly 80% of the 2.7 billion workers across manufacturing, construction, healthcare, transportation, agriculture, hospitality, and education are frontline. Learn best practices...

Voice your opinion!

To join the conversation, and become an exclusive member of IndustryWeek, create an account today!