New Survey Highlights Importance of Interoperability in the Internet of Things

73 percent of respondents agree industry standards are imperative for technological innovation, according to a new survey conducted by the Open Connectivity Foundation.

BEAVERTON, Ore.--()--The Open Connectivity Foundation (OCF), a leading Internet of Things (IoT) standards body, today announced the results of a survey conducted at CES 2017. After surveying 250 respondents, the results conclude that more than 60 percent of respondents consider standardization and interoperability when it comes to purchasing connected devices, cybersecurity concerns, and overall technological innovation in our society.

The IoT market is growing and changing rapidly, but the lack of industry consensus on open standards and protocols hinders that growth. Without seamless interoperability among connected devices, regardless of brand or manufacturer, the Internet of Things cannot reach its full potential. However, consumers are beginning to recognize the need for open standards to allow IoT to integrate into our lives and improve our society.

These survey results are a clear indicator that the issue of interoperability has come to the forefront of consumer concerns when it comes to IoT,” said Joonho Park, executive director of OCF. “With a unifying standard in place, which provides a consistent standard of security, privacy and device definitions, we can defragment the market to ensure the future entails a world where all devices, despite vendor, can communicate with one another and the Internet of Things can reach its full potential.”

Key findings from the survey include:

The IoT industry is growing rapidly:

  • 67 percent of respondents said they currently own three or more connected devices
  • 80 percent of respondents said they plan to buy a connected device in the next six months
  • 54 percent of respondents prefer their devices and appliances connect to the internet

Interoperability is a main concern for consumers:

  • 63 percent of respondents said it’s very important their devices interoperate and communicate seamlessly
  • 37 percent of respondents said lack of interoperability is the biggest limiting factor to universal adoption of connected devices, while 25% said security and privacy concerns

Consumers recognize a need for industry standards:

  • 73 percent of respondents said industry standards are very important to technology innovation
  • 60 percent of respondents said they would be much more likely to purchase connected devices if there was a security certification

The full survey findings and insights can be found here: https://openconnectivity.org/news/ocf-ces-survey-report

About Open Connectivity Foundation

Billions of connected devices (devices, phones, computers and sensors) should be able to communicate with one another regardless of manufacturer, operating system, chipset or physical transport. The Open Connectivity Foundation (OCF) is creating a specification and sponsoring an open source project to make this possible. OCF will unlock the massive opportunity in the IoT market, accelerate industry innovation and help developers and companies create solutions that map to a single open specification. OCF will help ensure secure interoperability for consumers, business, and industry. The AllSeen Alliance now operates under the Open Connectivity Foundation. For more information, please visit www.openconnectivity.org.

Contacts

Blanc & Otus
Danielle Tarp, 415-856-5182
OCFPR@blancandotus.com

Contacts

Blanc & Otus
Danielle Tarp, 415-856-5182
OCFPR@blancandotus.com