While connected consumer devices are driving the hype around the Internet of Things, executives from vendors including Hewlett Packard Enterprise, Cisco Systems and Forescout Technologies are shaping channel strategies around a less-discussed opportunity – operational technology.
Manufacturers are looking to connect the operational technology making up their factory floors – including control systems and data acquisition systems – opening up a gold mine of new recurring revenue services for vendors and their channel partners.
Tom Bradicich, vice president and general manager of servers, converged edge and IoT systems at Palo Alto, Calif.-based HPE, said at an IoT roundtable in March hosted by CRN that operational technology is “a $50 billion industry that’s not IT.”
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“It’s not just IT, it’s a separate opportunity,” he said. “The exciting part is that migration to the OT world because the end-to-end IoT solution includes a tremendous amount of OT, stuff we admittedly don’t make and sell. But it also includes a tremendous amount of IT, stuff we’re good at. We’re No. 1 in compute, for example. That combination is really where the channel partner will come in, when they combine it.”
The benefits to manufacturers in connecting their legacy operational technology systems are evident.
Bryan Tantzen, general manager of San Jose, Calif.-based Cisco’s connected industry and manufacturing business unit, said industrial companies could see as much as a 50 percent reduction in downtime and a 50 percent improvement in factory floor quality from IoT applications. “When I look at manufacturing, the value we’re going to get in the industries is stunning,” he said.
However, several manufacturers are still hesitant to deploy IoT in their factory floors – with security being a large challenge. Legacy SCADA systems, industrial control systems and other operational technologies are not built to combat the security risks once connected to the network.
Todd DeBell, vice president of worldwide channel sales at Cupertino, Calif.-based Forescout, called the influx of manufacturing products coming online “horrible” from a security standpoint.
“The challenge that you run into is the manufacturers are not necessarily thinking about security when they go to [IoT],” he said. “[Security is] not usually the primary focus. The primary focus has been, in the past, ‘Let’s get a good product out that actually delivers.’ We’re seeing a lot of manufacturers come back to us and say, “We want to get on your list. We want to know.” The amount and the explosiveness of the new devices that are coming online, it’s going to continue to be a problem, and it continues to grow faster.”
As vendors grapple with understanding operational technology, solution providers are the glue that can bring together vertical knowledge, customization, and security services for the industrial IoT space.