the rise in connected living and what it means for ict
TRANSCRIPT
The Rise of Connected Living and What It
Means for ICT
Audrey William, Head of Research
Information & Communication Technologies (ANZ)
15th May 2014
© 2012 Frost & Sullivan. All rights reserved. This document contains highly confidential information and is the sole property of
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State of the ICT Industry in 2014
$3.6Tr Global ICT
Revenues
2013
$1Tr Global Mobile
Revenue
40% Data
$50Bn Public
Cloud
2.2Bn Internet
Users
1Bn+ Mobile
Broadband
Subscribers 700Mn Fixed
1.2Bn+
Active
Users
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Definition of Connected Living
Connected Home Connected Work Connected City
• Home Automation • Smart Meters and Smart
Thermostats • Intelligent Lighting • Remote monitoring and
control • Home health - Remote
diagnostics; wearable health devices
• Mobility - Mobile email, enterprise mobile apps, people locator, bring your own device,
• Communication - unified messaging, remote desktop access,
• Networking - Web-based project collaboration tools, cloud-based file sharing services
• eGovernance • eCitizens • Smart transportation cards • E-learning • Mobile banking • Digital classroom, Remote
education service, Digital library
Connected Living
Connected Living describes a world in which consumers use many different devices to experience compelling new services that integrate video, voice, and data services to provide access and ubiquitous connectivity
anytime and anywhere.
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Connected Living Market Potential
Connected Living market expected to reach $731.70 billion by 2020 as the
importance of internet and digital solutions grows in the overall economy.
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Connected Living Market Breakdown by Segments : Connected City lead with an estimated market potential of $392.94 billion. Smart Governance and Education
Services will contribute 50% of growth in this segment
2012 Market Segments ($ Billion)
Source: Frost & Sullivan Analysis.
Home
Work
City
2020
*Unified Communication Products and Solutions
Communication*
Enterprise Social Software
Education
Transportation
Energy
Media and entertainment
Health
Automation and control
Enterprise Mobility
Governance
Banking and Financial
2.35
2.76
26.2
3.48
48.01
36
32.2
28
21.1
0.72
26.90
8.61
5.41
73.10
20.11
145.02
118
99.7
80
76.9
10.44
94.50
Connected Home Total 29.65 111.0
Connected Work Total 74.92 228.44
Connected City Total 122 392.24
Connected Living Total 226.83 731.70
Connected Living Market: Market Size Breakdown by Segments, Global, 2020
Vision of a Connected Home
Lighting: Centralised control panels to
control lighting around moods and preferences
Energy: Pre-programmed temperature control connected to
smart appliances sensitive to environmental considerations
Security: Use of cameras and automated alarm triggers to
manage security centrally
HVAC: Control and measurement of air and circulation
Health: Responsive and intelligent systems to monitor health and
prevent illness or harm
Entertainment: Bundled and demand services controlled
centrally
Connected home is defined as an residential environment embedded with computing and information technology which anticipates and responds to the needs of the occupants, working to promote their comfort, convenience,
security and entertainment
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Case Examples
Non-utility solutions offer unique connected home services for energy
management without relying on smart grids for connectivity
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Rise of Connected Devices
Connected Person (2020/2025) Connected Worker
(2020/2025)
Connected Citizen (2020/2025)
8-10 connected device per
household
90 million IP Telephones 15 million Interactive
Kiosks
3.7 billion Smartphones 400 million Laptops 25 million Cloud Servers
150 million Gaming Consoles by
2025
Over 60 million unified
communication platforms
Around 1 billion smart government
and ID cards
700 million Tablets Nearly 80% of enterprises adopt
BYOD in US
35 Billion Subscribed LBS Devices
by 2020
520 million Wearable Health-related
Devices
30% of population to access office
networks remotely
Around 500 million smart
transportation cards
410 million Smart Appliances 90% organisation to offer mobility
to workers
50 million contact-less payment
cards
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Vision of a Connected City
Banking • Mobile Payments • Kiosk service • Online Banking • Online Stock Trading
Governance • E-services • E-Administration • E-Security
Transportation • Smart Transportation Cards • Car infotainment services • Mobile traffic services • Telematics services
Education • Digital classroom • Remote education service • Digital library
Typical Connected Work Services and Solutions by Key Segment
A B
C D
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Case Study – Amsterdam’s Plans for a “Connected Bus to
Promote sustainable Public Transportation
Transit information updates relayed on
personal devices including updates on
bus reservations, traffic reports,
scheduled construction, city events, weather conditions etc.
Real-time Travel Planning
Courier Service Open Source
Communication Personalized Bus
The Connected Bus gives passengers real-time travel information and wireless connectivity and new services such as ability to have something collected and dropped by the bus like a courier company would.
Passengers can order online before or while
riding the bus. The order will be
aggregated, collected, and delivered by the bus in conjunction
with a partner service (e.g. Starbucks).
Allows passengers to communicate on a peer-to-peer (P2P)
basis, including instant messaging within bus
or bus-to-bus; or sharing ratings for local businesses.
Complete connectivity with “internet
everywhere” including technologies such as WiFi, NFC, and RFID.
Display on information on smart devices and
also on bus infrastructure
including windows and panels
Features of the Connected Bus
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Executive Summary – Key Participants in
Connected Living
Connected Work Connected City
Connected Home
Note: This is an illustration and
does not show all market
participants
AT&T
Citrix
Cisco
Vodafone
Verizon Comcast
Intel IBM
EON
Apple
Phillips
Samsung
Microsoft
T Mobile
Visa
GM
Deutsche
Telekom
LG
Orange
Nest
Siemens
MIELE
Alcatel Lucent
HP
Dell
Bosch
Unisys GE
Schneider
Electric
Polycom
Tandberg
Source: Frost & Sullivan
Telstra NTT DoCoMo
Korea Telecom
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Towards Connected Everything
Trillions of
things
Billions
Hundreds
of millions
Millions
No. of people / things No. of applications / apps
Tens of
millions
Millions
Tens of
thousands
Thousands
2020s
Transformation /
Innovation
Connected industries /
everything
1970s
Specialised
activities
Proprietary
equipment /
Mainframes
1990s
Increased
productivity
PCs /
Internet
2010s
Disruption /
Innovation
Mobile/
Cloud
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Nexus of Cloud Computing, Big Data, Mobility and Low
Cost sensors is driving Internet of Things/Connected
Industries
Mobility
Big Data
Cloud
Low Cost Sensors
Cloud allowing
access to content on
any device in any
location.
Low cost sensors are
becoming increasingly
powerful. They use apps in
the cloud and big data.
Mobility driving the
emergence of apps
which can be used
on any IP enabled
device.
Big data enables value to be
extracted out of exponential
increase in data. Data from
IoT needs to be analysed
2
3
4
1
Connected
Industries
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Connected Living : Value Chain of Smart Solutions
Extremely fragmented value chain with no clear “one stop shop” solution provider
providing end-to-end solutions
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Preparing for 2020
• Massive technology-led disruption across all
industries
• IoT is forcing transformation and innovation across
the Connected Home, Connected Workplace and
Connected City
• Immense opportunities for the Telecom operators
and ICT vendors
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Today’s Presenter
Audrey William, Head of Research
Information & Communication Technologies
Frost & Sullivan, Australia & New Zealand
Follow me on:
@Audrey_William
Audrey William is the Head of Research at Frost & Sullivan’s Australian and New Zealand ICT Practice. She
leads a team of analysts in the areas of Enterprise Communications, Cloud Computing and Digital Media.
Throughout her tenure with Frost & Sullivan she has acquired expertise in areas such as Unified
Communications, Conferencing and Collaboration, Cloud Computing, Digital Signage, Contact Centres, Social
Media, Mobile Device Management, M2M. She is often consulted for her strategic advice by leading vendors,
system integrators and channel partners for her inputs on go-to-market and channel strategy. Audrey is also often
invited to speak at regional vendor conferences and trade events and has presented at over 60 conferences in
the region. Additionally she has also presented her research findings at several universities. Her views and
opinions are also frequently featured in leading trade publications and dailies such as CIOworld, The Australian,
Sydney Morning Herald, Computerworld, Reuters, MIS Asia, The Wall Street Journal, CRN and ARN.
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