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Which Communications Service Providers Are the Leaders for IoT?

2023-03-16
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Which Communications Service Providers Are the Leaders for IoT?
Illustration: © IoT For All

In February 2023, we published the ‘Communications Service Provider IoT Peer Benchmarking Report 2023’ report, a comprehensive analysis of the strategies and capabilities of 23 leading global providers of cellular-based IoT connectivity (1NCE, AT&T, BICS, Deutsche Telekom IoT, Emnify, Eseye, KORE, KPN, NTT, Ooredoo, Orange, Sierra Wireless, Singtel, Soracom, T-Mobile US, Tele2, Telefónica, Telenor, Telia, Telit, Verizon, Vodafone, and Wireless Logic).

One of the key features of the report is an assessment of the relative capabilities of each of those CSPs in addressing global IoT connectivity, an assessment that saw Vodafone top of the pile, a strong showing from other major MNOs, and great progress from IoT MVNOs. This article provides a summary of that aspect of the research: which CSP is best?

There is No ‘The Best’

The question of which of the 23 is the best provider is the most reductive of questions. The answer will always be “it depends.” As an analyst, I always try desperately to give that response to questions, but sometimes it’s unavoidable. It depends on innumerable factors, including the capabilities that you need, the location of your devices, your preferred commercial models, or even which cloud provider you use.

If you’re an automotive OEM looking to connect cars in the Asia-Pacific region you would do well to look at Singtel, particularly given that it can corral a group of fellow operators in the region under the auspices of the Bridge Alliance. If you want to connect smart meters in Sweden, you’re unlikely to look much beyond Telia. If you’re a Japanese heavy equipment manufacturer wanting easy integration with AWS, Soracom will be top of your list.

But There is Best Practice

However, there is an interesting underlying question: what is best practice in IoT connectivity? This is a much better question to ask if you are an enterprise thinking about connecting IoT devices. This helps identify the types of capabilities they should be seeking out, and therefore shortlist providers accordingly. This is a better role for our analysis than trying to spotlight the individual operator that will be the answer to every buyer’s needs because there isn’t one.

As a result, in this report, we have elected to focus on innovation and best practice: which of these IoT Connectivity Providers has the most scalable, compliant, transparent, and/or future-proof approaches to addressing the various elements of IoT connectivity and adjacent IoT services. That way we can, in some way, provide a useful comparison of capabilities.

It also, of course, helps IoT Connectivity Providers themselves to understand what their peers are doing in the space and examine some of the best practices that we have identified to understand whether it would be appropriate for them to implement.

“…We…focus on innovation and best practice: which of these IoT Connectivity Providers has the most scalable, compliant, transparent, and/or future-proof approaches to addressing the various elements of IoT connectivity and adjacent IoT services.”

-Transforma Insights

Two Dimensions: IoT Connectivity and IoT Services

There are innumerable ways in which we could have sought to benchmark the CSPs that we looked at. We have chosen to use a framework laid out in our recent report ‘A new taxonomy for IoT reveals new roles and opportunities’ (January 2023), which is explored in a recent blog post ‘A new taxonomy for the Internet of Things‘. In that report, we set out our perspective that there are now seven Service Domains within IoT. One of those relates to Connectivity Management, i.e. the provision of managed connectivity over public networks. The companies profiled in this report are collectively the market leaders in such services.

Additionally, we also identified another six domains, covering areas such as devices, cloud/edge, security, and compliance, all of which are potentially relevant for providers of connectivity. These are very closely adjacent to IoT connectivity and offer significant opportunities for the differentiation of a service offering. These wider IoT services provide the second dimension against which we rate our CSPs.

Transforma Insights

Our rating of a CSP’s capabilities in the Connectivity Management Domain (which is not to be confused with just the ‘Connectivity Management Platform’), i.e. IoT connectivity, spans six elements, examined below:

  1. Support for multi-country deployment – There are a variety of mechanisms for connecting devices in multiple geographies including roaming, wholesale, multi-IMSI, eSIM profile donation, and various combinations of those. When rating this we give particular consideration to service compliance (particularly related to specific countries including Brazil, China, India, and Turkey) and control, rather than the use of specific approaches. This category also considers the availability of full features for NB-IoT and LTE-M such as PSM and eDRX.

  2. Scalability of platform and core network elements – IoT connectivity needs to scale to support billions of devices. As a result, highly scalable core network and connectivity management capabilities will be vital in the future.

  3. Global traffic management – Many CSPs have specifically engineered functionality for optimally managing the flows of IoT data globally, including peering and interconnecting as well as a local breakout.

  4. Connectivity management features – This focuses on enhanced features that allow for the optimization of delivering connectivity. It includes consideration of Connectivity Management Platform (CMP) features (including service tiering) and other capabilities such as device applets or connectivity twins.

  5. Commercial capabilities – The degree to which the CSP is focusing attention on selling direct to enterprises (rather than wholesale) and reflecting the strength of channels to market and investment in support services.

  6. Multi-bearer support – This incorporates considerations of supporting connectivity using a technology other than regular terrestrial 3GPP cellular. It includes considerations of the availability of mobile private networks, LoRaWAN, and LEO satellites, as well as having optimized support for NB-IoT and LTE-M.

IoT Services

This considers the capabilities of the CSPs across the six other IoT Service Domains:

  1. Devices & Device Management – Devices are the starting point for many IoT deployments. There is an increasing need for cross-optimization of devices with connectivity, and the advent of eSIM makes for a greater correlation between device and connectivity sales. Device-related capabilities can include the provision of hardware, the integration and cross-optimization with connectivity, and the management of the device lifecycle including inventory and fulfillment.

  2. Cloud/Edge Management – IoT applications are increasingly deployed in the cloud and there is a growing demand for edge computing to take advantage of low latency and reduce cellular traffic. A key function here is to integrate data into cloud functions (e.g. with cloud connectors) and to orchestrate the processing and storage between the different cloud and edge layers.

  3. Business Integration Management – IoT is deployed to feed data into an enterprise’s back-office systems, e.g. CRM or ERP. Managing the flow of semi-processed data into client systems is a close adjacency for IoT connectivity. Typically, this capability is provided by Application Enablement Platforms.

  4. Security – This cuts across the device, network, transport, and end-to-end security. There are a set of standard features that many connectivity providers offer, including private APNs, IP VPNs, and IMEI locking. Higher-tier capabilities include transport layer security (e.g. IoT SAFE), network diagnostics, and troubleshooting tools. At the highest level is a set of full end-to-end services including design and policy management.

  5. Compliance – With increasing amounts of regulation around IoT, e.g. permanent roaming, data sovereignty, or know-your-customer, there is an increasing requirement for services associated with compliance. Some CSPs are starting to feature compliance services within their offering, up to and including a managed service.

  6. Contextualization – Often a key differentiator is simply having experience in a particular vertical to understand how all the other elements should be brought together to address the client’s requirement. This is not about the provision of vertical applications, rather the focus is on expertise/knowledge within the vertical and therefore the ability to feel the client’s pain and speak its language. It also relates to some of the other prior layers, for instance, contextualization of security, regulation, or device requirements.

We Don’t Consider Going ‘Up the Stack’ With Vertical Solutions

The seven Service Domains are focused on the provision of horizontal services. Many CSPs have also elected to go ‘up the stack’ and deliver full end-to-end vertical solutions for end customers, for instance, Verizon’s fleet management offering, or Vodafone’s connected car offering. We have included extensive discussion of these capabilities within the individual CSP profiles but have decided not to include a comparison of these capabilities as part of the report. It is difficult to find enough common ground between the providers to allow for a decent comparison, and besides this, the competitive environment for such services is a set of specific vertical solution vendors rather than fellow CSPs.

And Who Comes Out on Top?

Vodafone emerges as the highest-rated vendor in the analysis, across both IoT connectivity and IoT services. Other major MNOs also score well, including Deutsche Telekom, NTT, Telefónica, Verizon, and Orange. In particular, they tend to score strongly across the wider IoT services, reflecting their scale and presence across other ICT areas, including security and wider consulting.

In contrast, the increasingly assertive IoT MVNOs are much more specifically focused on pure IoT connectivity, and do a strong job with that. In IoT connectivity, it is often the MVNOS that are doing some of the most innovative and interesting work. We highlight 1NCE, Emnify, Eseye, and Wireless Logic as having pulled together compelling connectivity offerings which are gaining traction, plus KORE which has additionally done strong work enhancing its wider IoT Services offering, including particularly related to devices.

It is important to stress that many of these CSPs are going through some periods of change at the moment. Vodafone is going through a process of spinning out its IoT unit in some way, and AT&T has just resurrected its Connected Solutions business under its Emerging Business. Besides this, Deutsche Telekom, as the relatively new DT IoT business, is working increasingly with T-Mobile on the one-year-old T IoT initiative. Ooredoo, Sierra Wireless, Telenor, Telia, Telit, and several others have gone through a period of change recently. There is a lot more innovation, and possibly a bit of retrenchment away from IoT, to come.

Transforma Insights

 

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参考译文
哪些通信服务提供商是物联网的领导者?
2023年2月,我们发布了《通信服务提供商物联网同行基准测试报告2023年》报告,全面分析了23家全球领先的基于蜂窝的物联网连接提供商(1NCE、at&t、BICS、德国电信物联网、Emnify、Eseye、KORE、KPN、NTT、Ooredoo、Orange、Sierra Wireless、Singtel、Soracom、T- mobile US、Tele2、Telefónica、Telenor、Telia、Telit、Verizon、沃达丰和Wireless Logic)的战略和能力。该报告的一个关键特征是评估了每个csp在解决全球物联网连接方面的相对能力,评估显示沃达丰位居榜首,其他主要MNOs表现强劲,物联网MVNOs取得了巨大进展。本文对这方面的研究进行了总结:哪种CSP是最好的?23个国家中哪一个是最好的提供者,这个问题是最简单的问题。答案总是“视情况而定”。作为一名分析师,我总是不顾一切地对问题做出这样的回答,但有时这是不可避免的。这取决于无数的因素,包括你需要的功能,你的设备的位置,你首选的商业模式,甚至你使用的云提供商。如果你是一家希望在亚太地区连接汽车的汽车OEM,你最好看看新加坡电信,尤其是考虑到它可以在桥梁联盟(Bridge Alliance)的支持下,在该地区召集一批同行运营商。如果你想在瑞典连接智能电表,除了Telia,你不太可能去看太多。如果你是一家日本重型设备制造商,想要轻松地与AWS集成,Soracom将是你的首选。然而,有一个有趣的潜在问题:物联网连接的最佳实践是什么?如果您是一家考虑连接物联网设备的企业,那么这个问题就更好了。这有助于确定他们应该寻找的功能类型,从而相应地列出提供商的候选名单。对于我们的分析来说,这是一个更好的角色,而不是试图聚焦单个运营商,这将是每个买家需求的答案,因为没有一个。因此,在本报告中,我们选择专注于创新和最佳实践:哪些物联网连接提供商具有最可扩展性、最合规、最透明和/或最经得起未来考验的方法来解决物联网连接和邻近物联网服务的各种元素。这样,我们就可以在某种程度上提供有用的能力比较。当然,这也有助于物联网连接提供商自己了解同行在该领域的所作所为,并检查我们已经确定的一些最佳实践,以了解它们是否适合实施这些实践。“……我们……专注于创新和最佳实践:哪些物联网连接提供商拥有最可扩展、最合规、最透明和/或最经得起未来考验的方法来解决物联网连接和邻近物联网服务的各种元素。”我们有无数种方法可以对我们所研究的csp进行基准测试。我们选择使用我们最近的报告《物联网的新分类揭示了新的角色和机会》(2023年1月)中提出的框架,这在最近的博客文章《物联网的新分类》中进行了探讨。在这份报告中,我们提出了我们的观点,现在物联网中有七个服务领域。其中之一涉及连接性管理,即在公共网络上提供受管理的连接性。本报告中介绍的公司都是此类服务的市场领导者。 此外,我们还确定了另外六个领域,涵盖设备、云/边缘、安全性和合规性等领域,所有这些领域都可能与连接提供商相关。这些与物联网连接非常接近,并为服务提供差异化提供了重要机会。这些更广泛的物联网服务提供了我们评估csp的第二个维度。我们对CSP在连接管理领域(不要与“连接管理平台”混淆)的能力的评级,即物联网连接,涵盖以下六个要素:这考虑了CSP在其他六个物联网服务领域的能力:七个服务领域专注于提供横向服务。许多csp也选择了“堆栈向上”,为终端客户提供完整的端到端垂直解决方案,例如,Verizon的车队管理产品,或沃达丰的联网汽车产品。我们已经在各个CSP概要中包含了对这些功能的广泛讨论,但决定不将这些功能的比较作为报告的一部分。在供应商之间很难找到足够的共同点来进行适当的比较,除此之外,此类服务的竞争环境是一组特定的垂直解决方案供应商,而不是同行的csp。在分析中,沃达丰在物联网连接和物联网服务方面都是评级最高的供应商。其他主要的MNOs也得分不错,包括德国电信、NTT、Telefónica、Verizon和Orange。特别是,他们往往在更广泛的物联网服务中得分很高,这反映了他们在其他ICT领域的规模和存在,包括安全和更广泛的咨询。相比之下,越来越自信的物联网mvno更专注于纯粹的物联网连接,并在这方面做得很好。在物联网连接方面,通常是MVNOS在做一些最具创新性和最有趣的工作。我们强调1NCE、Emnify、Eseye和Wireless Logic汇集了引人注目的连接产品,这些产品正在获得关注,再加上KORE,后者还做了强有力的工作,增强了其更广泛的物联网服务,包括特别是与设备相关的服务。需要强调的是,许多csp目前正在经历一些变化时期。沃达丰正在以某种方式分拆其物联网部门,而美国电话电报公司刚刚在其新兴业务下恢复了其连接解决方案业务。除此之外,作为相对较新的DT物联网业务,德国电信正与T- mobile在已有一年的T物联网计划上进行越来越多的合作。Ooredoo、Sierra Wireless、Telenor、Telia、Telit和其他几家公司最近都经历了一段变化时期。未来还会有更多的创新,物联网领域可能会出现一些收缩。
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