What do IoT and smart home device makers need to know to connect their devices to the web?

Cees Links, the founder and CEO, GreenPeak

Worldwide, thousands of technology companies are viewing the Internet of Things and the Smart Home as the Holy Grail for their products and profits. Most industry analysts and leaders are predicting that hundreds of millions of homes will want these new technologies.

However, before the device makers begin to design and develop new solutions, they need to understand that this market is rapidly changing and evolving, especially when looking at the Smart Home and the consumer electronics market. This is a moving target, says Cees Links, CEO of GreenPeak Technologies, that manufacturers need to understand.

First off, the Internet of Things (IoT) – especially for the Smart Home – is not about things. Instead it is about services that will make consumers’ lives more comfortable, more secure and more efficient. Energy control, security, improving the efficiency of daily life, etc.

Unfortunately, the label of the IoT with the word “things” puts many people on the wrong path of thinking.

Things are the necessary enablers, but the complete solution includes data analytics, smart phone apps and billing/support systems as well. There is an entire ecosystem at play, in which things play a (minor) role.

Also, many people confuse IoT things with connected devices. It is not enough to just web connect a device – it needs to be able to speak to other devices and systems in the home, as well as to be able to become smart – to utilise web intelligence, so that is more than just a remotely operated sensor or actuator.

If a manufacturer wants to be successful in the new and highly competitive Internet of Things market, it needs to understand two important concepts:

  1. The Internet of Things and the Smart Home is not about pushing products (“things”) out of the door, but it is about reinventing products into services. Internet of Things business models are about recurring services and recurring revenue streams, not (only) about paying for a product at the check-out register.
  2. Customers are buying solutions for problems, real or perceived. They are looking very specifically for things like “security”, “energy control”, “assisted living”, etc. And they want to be able to monitor and control these different solutions from the same place – a single dashboard. They don’t want to have to use a variety of different apps with different user interfaces (UI) to manage their homes and their family’s life.

Manufacturers and service providers need to work together – to bring all the different home equipment and services together under a single umbrella with a common UI – a single app (Smart Home Butler) that lets the family members, understand what is happening in their home and enable them to manage it, if not managing it for them.

Manufacturers and service providers need to work together – to bring all the different home equipment and services together under a single umbrella with a common UI – a single app (Smart Home Butler) that lets the family members, understand what is happening in their home and enable them to manage it, if not managing it for them.
The Family Lifestyle system uses sensors, connected devices, cloud intelligence, and social media to combine a variety of important services into a simple to use app that enables service providers to make their customer’s lives easier and more secure.

The Smart Home is a wonderful concept, but concepts alone do not solve immediate customer needs. For example, no one is looking for a refrigerator that can talk with the toaster – but if these kinds of kitchen appliances can help make the home shopping task simpler, if the connected appliances can make it easier to schedule and prepare meals, then maybe this really is an effective solution that people are interested in.

Device makers need to be very precise in what problem they are solving for their customer, and evolve away from simply marketing the “concept” of connected devices.

The end game is connected solutions that make our lives easier, safer and more efficient. Device makers and service providers need to look at the BIG picture, not just the components and the individual machines and devices.

The author of this blog is Cees Links, founder and CEO, GreenPeak.

About the author

The author is Cees Links, the founder and CEO of GreenPeak. Under his responsibility, the first wireless LANs were developed, ultimately becoming household technology integrated into PCs and notebooks. He also pioneered the development of access points, home networking routers, and hotspot base-stations.

He was involved in the establishment of the IEEE 802.11 standardisation committee and the Wi-Fi Alliance. He was also instrumental in establishing the IEEE 802.15 standardisation committee to become the basis for the ZigBee sense and control networking.

Comment on this article below or via Twitter: @IoTNow_ OR @jcIoTnow

RECENT ARTICLES

Workz debuts unrestricted IoT device management

Posted on: May 3, 2024

Workz, a cloud-based eSIM vendor, has launched its new remote device management solution designed for the Internet of Things (IoT) industry. The platform eliminates the restrictions associated with traditional technologies

Read more

Itron improves Temetra platform for water utilities in Australia and New Zealand

Posted on: May 2, 2024

Itron expands the capabilities of its Temetra platform in Australia and New Zealand to include NB-IoT communications, enabling digital transformation for water utilities. Temetra’s comprehensive offering includes metre data processing,

Read more
FEATURED IoT STORIES

What is IoT? A Beginner’s Guide

Posted on: April 5, 2023

What is IoT? IoT, or the Internet of Things, refers to the connection of everyday objects, or “things,” to the internet, allowing them to collect, transmit, and share data. This

Read more

The IoT Adoption Boom – Everything You Need to Know

Posted on: September 28, 2022

In an age when we seem to go through technology boom after technology boom, it’s hard to imagine one sticking out. However, IoT adoption, or the Internet of Things adoption,

Read more

9 IoT applications that will change everything

Posted on: September 1, 2021

Whether you are a future-minded CEO, tech-driven CEO or IT leader, you’ve come across the term IoT before. It’s often used alongside superlatives regarding how it will revolutionize the way

Read more

Which IoT Platform 2021? IoT Now Enterprise Buyers’ Guide

Posted on: August 30, 2021

There are several different parts in a complete IoT solution, all of which must work together to get the result needed, write IoT Now Enterprise Buyers’ Guide – Which IoT

Read more

CAT-M1 vs NB-IoT – examining the real differences

Posted on: June 21, 2021

As industry players look to provide the next generation of IoT connectivity, two different standards have emerged under release 13 of 3GPP – CAT-M1 and NB-IoT.

Read more

IoT and home automation: What does the future hold?

Posted on: June 10, 2020

Once a dream, home automation using iot is slowly but steadily becoming a part of daily lives around the world. In fact, it is believed that the global market for

Read more

5 challenges still facing the Internet of Things

Posted on: June 3, 2020

The Internet of Things (IoT) has quickly become a huge part of how people live, communicate and do business. All around the world, web-enabled devices are turning our world into

Read more