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IFS Study: Double-digit increases in industrial IoT sophistication in 2018

Study explores the potential for IoT to stream data through the business logic, use AI to constantly learn, and then apply that learning by creating new business logic.

Study explores the potential for IoT to stream data through the business logic, use AI to constantly learn, and then apply that learning by creating new business logic.

IFS, a global enterprise applications company, has released a research study of 200 North American executives that reveals substantial year-over-year gains in internet of things (IoT) usage in industrial companies.

According to the study, executives at respondent companies ranging from manufacturers to trade contractors and oil and gas companies are collecting more data from connected devices, integrating it with other systems in new ways, and making IoT more central to their businesses.

The study shows:
● Companies collecting IoT data on entire work cells or production lines rather than individual machine components or individual machines has increased by 17%. This enables more advanced use cases, which helps explain a 30% increase in use of IoT to support asset performance management.
● Respondents using IoT to monitor their customer equipment saw a 10% increase, potentially signaling transformational approaches to field service management.
● Despite these advances, the percentage of respondents who have integrated IoT data streams with their enterprise resource planning (ERP) software hovers at 16%. This reluctance may represent a barrier to leveraging IoT to deliver net new business models or revenue opportunities.

“Enterprise IoT integration allows you to take incoming data from connected devices and use it to create business events in ERP,” IFS chief product officer Christian Pedersen said. “The software can either present that data to humans or act on it as it comes in. Think of the potential for IoT constantly streaming into ERP through the business logic, where artificial intelligence (AI) applications constantly learn and apply that learning by creating new business logic. That is when AI will see the real breakthrough—and when ERP systems will dramatically transform, changing the way we think about them.”

“IoT is a big disruptor,” said Antony Bourne, president, IFS Industries. “But if industrial companies do not embrace digital transformation, chances are that their business will be the one that’s disrupted by more agile competitors. IoT helps companies transform their businesses, making them more efficient, enabling them to explore new revenue sources and fundamentally changing business processes. One key constraint is the lack of skilled resources with the ability to deploy transformation technologies. Experienced partners both in enterprise software and technology platforms can help overcome these constraints and identify a proven way forward.”

Click here to download the study.