Overcoming IIoT Integration Issues

In a digital world, OEMs must find new ways to work with equipment by leveraging—and learning from—data. But connecting legacy systems to the cloud isn’t easy. Here’s what you need to know to reap the rewards of the Industrial Internet of Things.

Litmus Automation
Litmus Automation

Contributed by John Younes, Co-Founder and COO, Litmus Automation

The Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT) represents an undeniable business opportunity to OEMs developing industrial equipment and packaging machinery. Just about every industry is digitizing, and manufacturing is no different.  While customers purchase equipment to perform a specific task, connecting the asset can help them make more money and improve efficiencies for the asset’s limited lifecycle.  Forward-thinking customers are going even further, enabling machine learning and artificial intelligence, which gives their machines human-like behaviors and the ability to optimize cycle times and material use very quickly.

 

According to market research firm Statista, global spending on IoT in industrial manufacturing, automotive, infrastructure, electronics, energy, life sciences and retail sectors, is predicted to increase from $472 billion in 2014 to $890 billion by 2020. OEMs, including equipment makers and component manufacturers, can capture more of this market by integrating IoT technologies that will help customers automate data capture from any number of connected machines or edge devices, aggregate that data to the cloud and apply analytics to identify trends and make business decisions.

 

Advanced IoT offerings give manufacturers the ability to remotely monitor equipment, predict operating failures, and preempt issues through preventative maintenance to increase customer uptime. In the end, customers have more data, better data and better business intelligence—all with the potential to deliver higher margins for bottom-line profitability.  

 

However, implementing IIoT technology effectively has not been easy for OEMs who are dealing with both new and existing infrastructure, both of which must be data-ready and connected. While most OEMs have focused their engineering efforts toward understanding their core market and delivering value, typically, developing a reliable and secure IoT platform with end-to-end connectivity between devices and the cloud is beyond their expertise. Some OEMs are investing in building IoT expertise in-house, but they risk delays in their go-to-market strategy that would place them behind more agile competitors.

 

Luckily, OEMs can take advantage of an existing ecosystem of technology companies with products that include wireless sensors, gateways, cloud platforms, and a full range of data collection and analytics applications. These types of IIoT solutions are not just concepts anymore—they are real, working solutions, and enable industrial OEMs to introduce IIoT capabilities into their existing product lines quickly and with minimal development investment.

 

Meeting the integration challenge

With so many options, the challenge for OEMs is to integrate best-in-class solutions quickly and reliably. For example, there are a myriad of PLCs, controllers and sensors available to control machines and track variables like temperature, pressure or strain. But IIoT systems need to be able to connect to a variety of edge devices with proprietary protocols and data formats. They also need to be able to secure communications to these devices, even for legacy equipment never designed to connect to the Internet. Last but not least, a reliable management system must be in place that can scale to potentially hundreds of thousands of devices throughout the world, depending upon the application.

 

OEMs can reduce this complexity by leveraging edge and cloud computing IIoT platforms to manage and connect any type of device or machine to the Internet and integrate the data collected in real-time with any enterprise system or application that can utilize the data. There are a number of IIoT platforms out there today. In January, research firm MachNation released its 2018 IoT Application Enablement Platform (AEP) ScoreCard, an in-depth rating of 21 Internet of Things platform vendors.

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