スマートコネクティッドプロダクツ 製造メーカーの次なる変革

Smart, Connected Products:
Manufacturing’s next
transformation
Key research findings
About Oxford Economics
PTC partnered with Oxford
Economics to conduct a
study on the impact of
smart, connected
products—the “things” in the
Internet of Things—in the
manufacturing industry. An
overview of the top-level
findings from our study is
summarized in this
slideshow.
Download the full report,
Smart, Connected Products:
Manufacturing’s Next
Transformation, for the
complete findings and
analysis, including case
studies of leading firms.
Oxford Economics was founded in
1981 as a joint venture with Oxford
University. Since then, the company
has become one of the world’s
foremost independent global
research firms.
Headquartered in Oxford, England,
with offices throughout the world,
Oxford Economics employs more
than 80 professional macroeconomic
and industry economists—one of the
largest teams of economists in the
private sector.
Get more information at
oxfordeconomics.com
PTC’s technology solutions help
customers transform the way they
create and service products across
the entire product lifecycle—from
conception and design to sourcing
and service—to create sustained
competitive advantage.
Founded in 1985, PTC employs
approximately 6,000 professionals,
including 1,300 dedicated service
professionals, serving more than
27,000 businesses in rapidly
evolving, globally distributed
manufacturing industries worldwide.
Get more information at PTC.com
About the research
We conducted an online survey of 300 executives across the manufacturing industry and key world markets
in the first quarter of 2014. Survey respondents come from 13 countries in North America, Europe, and Asia
and are from sectors ranging from aerospace and defense to medical devices, automotive, and consumer
products. Only firms with strategies to develop smart, connected products were considered. We also
conducted interviews with senior executives at leading companies in Europe and North America.
Respondents by business function
Respondents by annual revenue
Key findings
Smart, connected products—the “things” in the Internet of Things—are expected to power the next
wave of manufacturing. However, smart, connected products are at a roughly similar state of
development as the Internet in the late 1990s. Their enormous potential is widely recognized, but the
road map to a mature market is only now starting to take shape.
The SCP revolution is well
under way, but it is going to
take time, effort, and
investment on multiple
fronts to get there.
As strategies mature, the
challenges, opportunities, and
value of an SCP strategy shift
from being product specific to
the SCP ecosystem as a whole.
Businesses must accelerate
the changes they are making
around SCPs across three key
themes or risk being left behind.
Not an overnight sensation
The slow fuse
SCP strategies are still developing.
Manufacturers that start sooner will gain
valuable clarity into how long the
maturation process will take.
Nearly half of survey respondents say
they started more than two years ago,
and another third say they started more
than three years ago.
Key insights:
 Only 54% of survey respondents say
their customers understand the benefit
and values of SCPs.
 On average, businesses only have one
to nine employees solely dedicated to
SCPs. More resources will be required.
How long ago did your firm begin developing a
strategy for smart, connected products and the
Internet of Things?
Putting the ‘things’ in the Internet of Things
The focus of early adopters involves capturing and managing
product usage data and shifting more product features and
functionality to the cloud, where real-time analytics can be applied.
This has enabled new services like remote monitoring or optimizing
of existing services. Internally, the pioneering manufacturers have
integrated new applications with other enterprise systems.
Key insights:
 Nearly half of executives surveyed
believe SCPs offer substantial
transformative value.
 Growth remains in the early
stages, with substantial progress
expected.
What steps have you taken to transform your products and services around the Internet of Things?
34%
Captured and managed
usage data
31%
Shifted product features
and functionality to the
cloud
34%
Enabled new services
Climbing the maturity curve
Defining maturity
Over one-quarter of respondents—firms
with strategies to develop smart, connected
products—are in early stages of SCP
maturity. Three initial stages for maturing an
SCP business are:
 Developing an SCP strategy
 Piloting SCP capabilities in a product,
service, or line of business
 Deploying SCP capabilities and hard
assets at scale across business functions
Key insights:
 More-mature firms are much more likely to cite accelerating product and service innovation as a
measure of SCP success than those just developing a strategy, as the explosion of opportunities
driven by enhanced capabilities and data-driven innovation becomes clear to them.
 Companies with more advanced programs are far less likely to cite increased product revenue and
improved customer satisfaction as measures of SCP success.
Product capabilities reveal three tiers of adoption
Products that talk to their makers are common; products receiving actionable
information, less so. Products talking to each other is the next frontier.
Key insights:
 70% now make products
that can monitor their current
status.
 46% of surveyed firms can
deliver alerts and
notifications to their
connected products, and
only 40% say they enable
remote control of a product.
 29% of firms say their SCPs
act in coordination with other
product systems.
The transformation imperative
What holds transformation back
As strategies mature, the challenges shift
from being product-specific to the SCP
ecosystem as a whole.
Key insight:
“One of our core value points of the Volvo brand is safety.
But now it’s not just the safety of the physical vehicle but
also the security and privacy of the customer’s information.”
Klas Bendrik,Group CIO, Volvo Cars
To what extent do the following issues present challenges to your firm’s success
with smart, connected products?
Rethinking strategy: Commit or fall behind
A solid majority of executives says
the shift to SCPs requires significant
business transformation, and this
number increases in three years.
Their road map for product and
organizational innovation addresses
three broad shifts:
Key insight:
“It was not just a technology change. It was a change that
rippled through the organization from sales to accounting to
engineering, because we’re managing software
performance on behalf of the client.”
Ted Graef, CEO, All Traffic Solutions
Download the report
To see the full results of our survey along with case
studies of leading firms, download the report.