IoT Platform Shakedown

IoT Platform Shakedown

We are most of the way through 2019 – and are we still talking about IoT platforms? Yes, we are. Despite how poorly defined this term still is, and how much investor money has been thrown away, the platforms are here to stay and constitute the core of most IoT projects. Analyst firms and hype-mongers have often counted how many IoT platforms are available on the market (an exercise only slightly less frivolous than counting all the sensors or connected devices in the world). These estimates routinely exceed 500 available platforms, though that number has decreased in recent years with myriad failed businesses and M&A events.

IoT platforms are tools for connecting products and operations to the internet in valuable ways (for new business models and operational performance improvements). These platforms provide capabilities across key functional areas such as device management, connectivity, data routing/storage, application development, and analytics. Let’s discuss who is selling these things and where we see success – notes below based on thousands of conversations with executives at enterprises around the globe over the past five years, as well as dialogs with IoT solution vendors.

I would be extremely surprised if anyone were making more money selling IoT products than Microsoft and Amazon – we talk to a ton of large enterprise deploying Azure IoT and AWS IoT solutions at scale. Google is creeping up and certainly winning a lot of enterprise IoT cloud deals. Generally speaking, Microsoft, Amazon, and Google are considered to be the three main IoT cloud products winning in the market.

SAP and Oracle should be in good position to capitalize, since the ERP is either the “source of truth” or “last mile” (or both) for many IoT projects, but they continue to struggle to see traction with their IoT products. IBM makes a lot of noise, but we see very few enterprises buying their IoT products; meanwhile Salesforce and Cisco pop up here and there. The telcos were probably better poised than any other category to capitalize on the platform space, but they so woefully missed the boat – they let companies like Jasper, KORE, and Aeris eat their lunch.

Four years ago, GE was the top dog in terms of brand recognition and thought leadership. Today, GE is a case study in how to fail at digital transformation – the Predix platform never made the money it was supposed to and ultimately they tried to try to sell off the GE Digital business. Siemens has been a bit slower and quieter, but does seem to have moderate traction with its MindSphere IoT platform. We hear a lot of good things about Rockwell Automation from industrial operators. Rockwell has been innovative in partnership with Microsoft & Azure IoT, and Rockwell made big waves with a $1B investment in PTC in summer 2018.

PTC is a unique case – PTC historically was a CAD and PLM software provider, based in Boston with ~$1B in revenue. When IoT started to bubble, PTC started buying up startups – relevant acquisitions included Axeda, Kepware, Coldlight, Vuforia, and ThingWorx (ThingWorx eventually became the name of PTC’s IoT product suite). Three years ago, PTC was perhaps the IoT vendor with the most overall IoT projects (although many were small pilots). PTC has cooled off a bit but still remains one of the essential players in the space, and PTC is a good case study on build vs. buy – PTC gained a relevant product portfolio almost entirely through startup acquisitions, and was successful in doing so.

There are some good startups out there, too. People talk a lot about C3.ai and Uptake – these two companies have each raised roughly $300M, with valuations over $2B, and winning big logos to boot. It helps to have founding CEOs who are hyper-connected billionaires (Tom Siebel and Brad Keywell). Relayr has a great story, and the best business model in the industry – relayr was acquired by Munich Re / HSB last year, and the company has a unique model that combines IoT technology, business outcome insurance, and financing (this case study here outlines the premise in more detail). If you’re a startup trying to win at the platform game, you need a special differentiator like relayr, Uptake, and C3.ai – or you’re going bite the dust.

We hear rumblings from time to time about contract manufacturers providing platforms, largely to their machine manufacturing customers (think Foxconn, Flex, Jabil). Semiconductor manufacturers are all trying to sell something, but we rarely hear about people using them (think Qualcomm, Intel, Samsung). Accenture, PwC, Deloitte, and the likes are all selling something (and definitely making money doing so), but they are largely just repackaging Azure/AWS/Google products. And of course, plenty of big companies are still trying (and failing) to build their own platforms internally.

The IoT platform space is not much less confusing than it was five years ago. Consolidation has helped reduce the complexity, but only slightly. Frontrunners have emerged – Microsoft and Amazon are doing very well, and there are some awesome startups out there. But overall investors are disappointed, and it’s still the Wild West out there. Give us a call if you want some platform counselling, we’re here to help.

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Isaac Brown

VP / Landmark Ventures

landmarkventures.com

nysaac.io

Marty Blackmon

Strategic Wealth Advisor specializing in tax favored retirement strategies and special needs trust

5 年

Great Article. While I agree it's still the Wild West in platforms and IIoT, much like Blockchain, the technology itself is maturing and what I see in the market place today is that early adopter companies are going for a land grab with platforms, sensors, etc, much like tech companies did during the tech bubble in 1999 to get eyeballs on websites. We know that turned out to be a disaster, think pets.com but then out of the ashes came Amazon, Google, Netflix, the list goes on. There will be lots of winners and losers but at the moment it seems based on the maturation cycle of the tech, it's time for businesses to start using this tech to build real world applications to break through in security, better supply chain, preventative maintenance, health trends for equipment, better customer service, the list goes on. You mentioned in the article that SAP and Oracle should be in the drivers seat and while the jury is out on if these companies will be "the ones", we do know that the ERP systems of tomorrow will drive prescriptive level technologies using IIoT so I guess once we start seeing these guys moving we'll know the tech has arrived and infiltrated all business processes. I am excited to see what's ahead over the next 5 years as I've been saying it's going to make the last 10 years look like horse and buggies compared to drag racers zooming around.? We should remember, when it comes to providing real world business solutions using these technologies, IIoT / IoT, blockchain and technology in general are just tools not solutions. While engineers and techies alike salivate at what both IIoT and the blockchain is capable of today, adoption with real world use cases in the industrial world is just starting to catch the wave and we're nowhere near cresting. In baseball terms I'd say we're just coming out of the dugout and about to start the game and we could surely go into extra innings based on what we're experiencing in our own industrial elevator/escalator space with regard to using IIoT and predictive analytics.? Exciting Times. Thanks again for the article and the insight.

Kevin See

Head of Ecosystem @ Activate | Defining and executing strategy for deep tech

5 年

Well done. But a question continues to nag me, ever since we started looking at this space years ago together. Are all the offerings from these various vendors apples to apples? You point out the components of an IoT system, and it begs the question if say Amazon and Microsoft are good at all of them, or if they are doing well simply because of the strength of their cloud business. Do I need to buy from Amazon and Microsoft, if the "good" part of their solution is readily repackaged by others who are stronger in other areas?

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Guneet Bedi

SVP Arduino | CRO | Investor | Board Member | Father | Forbes Business Council | as a Service | Digital

5 年

Very well written Isaac; and the IoT/IIoT Platforms will be important for digital transformation of customers; and the key is for Industrial world to understand where to partner vs. where to build their own “secret sauce” and focus on the Business Outcomes. We will see a lot of reluctance from Industrial clients to get outside help from experts listed here.

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Miraj Mainali

Innovation | Emerging Tech | 5G

5 年

Great analysis! The other interesting thing we have observed is that with the VC funding in IoT platforms recently nosediving, startups no longer identify themselves as an IoT platform provider anymore. Some startups use more vague terms like 'AI platforms' and 'Application enablement platform' to mimic a head fake that they have pivoted to new businesses. The increasingly competitive landscape has quickly turned the once-notorious buzzword into an eschewed term in less than five years. #LuxTake

Vinay Pattni

I help industrial companies realise successful business outcomes using relayr IIoT innovations

5 年

Thanks for sharing, Isaac. Great insights! The platform/technology debate will continue to rage on. I think the successful IOT platforms will be those which focus truly on business model transformation rather than just focusing on digital transformation. Digital/technology is a component but by no means the only ingredient needed for success.

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