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IoT represents 'immense' opportunity for channel
Wed, 17th Aug 2016
FYI, this story is more than a year old

The Internet of Things is bringing a new wave of opportunity – and challenges – to IT services providers who have spent the past decade striving to master managed service and cloud services.

That's according to CompTIA, who says the overall IoT opportunity for IT service providers is immense.

Moheb Moses, director, Channel Dynamics, and ANZ Community Director, CompTIA, says everything that can be connected, will be connected. This assertion aptly captures the essence of IoT.

“There is a steady march to enhance the utility of devices, objects, structures and even people through connectivity, network effects and intelligent functionality,” Moses says.

“Over the past two years, this concept has evolved from a technologist's curiosity into a fully-fledged business opportunity.”

Pushing beyond traditional PCs, smartphones and tablets, the IoT ecosystem spans a new generation of consumer and industrial devices that connect to the internet, Moses explains.

Many of the connections involve sensors feeding data to big data cloud servers and centralised data centers. But a growing number of the deployments involve smart-edge systems, where local processing and intelligence reduce the need for wide-area connections.  This is where the IoT opportunity for IT service providers lays, Moses says.

Total services spending for the IoT sector will hit $235 billion by 2016, up 22% from 2015, according to Gartner.

“At first glance, those IoT opportunities involve steep learning curves in complex areas like network sensors, big data, mobile privacy, security, analytics and more,” says Moses.

“But take a closer look and businesses will discover a path from familiar technologies including databases, networking and endpoint management, that lead towards the IoT market.”  Seth Robinson, senior director, technology analysis, CompTIA, echoes Moses' sentiments.

“There is no doubt that the IoT involves a complex ecosystem, that includes hardware, software and connectivity, services, and rules, which needs to be taken into account when developing IoT technology,” he says.

“Understanding this ecosystem is the first step towards addressing security pitfalls, privacy concerns, or monetisation challenges."  Robinson says CompTIA has seen a rising interest in IoT from the channel.

“Channel businesses are seeking information from various sources and revenue expectations reflect a growing optimism. CompTIA believes there is a number of opportunities for the channel across the four components of the IoT ecosystem,” he explains.