2021 Connected World Report: The Top 3 Connectivity Ecosystems that will Simplify Human Lives - Homes, Cities, and Workplaces - ResearchAndMarkets.com
The "Future of Connected Living" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering.
Connected Cities:
Smart cities will drive the focus on connected and data-driven infrastructure, which will lead to higher adoption of technologies such as artificial intelligence (AI) and 5G. Smart cities' spending on technology - over the next 6 years - is expected to grow at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 22.7% and reach $327 billion by 2025. In a post-pandemic (COVID-19) world, cities will increasingly rely on online city services and open data platforms.
For instance, more than 99% of Estonian public services are digitalized, making local services easily accessible, predictive, and effective for residents. In the long term, connected cities will integrate all aspects of human life; connected cars will act as conduits to fulfill city needs and connected physical infrastructure will constantly communicate with vehicles and other transit solutions. Ultimately, connectivity will also provide cities with an opportunity to connect marginalized communities and build an inclusive society.
Connected Homes:
The home of the future will become the central hub for connected living. The COVID-19 pandemic has accelerated the need for homes to evolve into on-demand workspaces, entertainment centers, fitness spaces, and telehealth centers. AI, augmented and virtual reality (AR/VR), advanced computing, and data analytics will enable a personalized user experience.
The connected home of the future will anticipate resident behavior and adjust the home environment accordingly. Seamless connectivity will also facilitate the standardization of platforms across the intelligent device ecosystem. With the ongoing shift in energy prosumerism, homes will also transform into smart energy generation and transmission hubs.
Connected Workspaces:
Telecommuting by employees has grown by 115% over the past 10 years. The COVID-19 pandemic has reinforced the need for workplace connectivity. Zoom, one of the largest beneficiaries of the pandemic, recorded more than a 300% increase in revenue during 2019-2020.
By 2030, around 75% of office workers, especially those working for large corporations, could move to remote work. Inter-connected hubs, digital reality solutions, and growth in unified communication and collaborative services will narrow the gap between physical and digital workplaces. IoT, automation, data analytics, and AR solutions will empower the connected worker of the future.
In addition, the vision of a connected enterprise ecosystem will allow companies to build a unified strategy to predict, prepare for, and overcome challenges.
Connectivity is rapidly transforming the business landscape, with new value chain partnerships, product innovation, and new business models reshaping market dynamics every day. To survive in a hyper-connected era, companies must ensure that their products and services are not only connected but also intuitive, conversant, and intelligent. For incumbents, service differentiation and strategic partnerships with technology leaders to build a broader connected ecosystem are key to thrive and sustain growth.
Key Topics Covered:
1. Strategic Imperatives
Why is it Increasingly Difficult to Grow?
The Strategic Imperative
The Impact of the Top Three Strategic Imperatives on Connected Living
Growth Opportunities Fuel the Growth Pipeline Engine
Key Findings
Growth Opportunities Critical to Future Success
2. What will a Hyperconnected Era Look Like?
Connected Living Environment - An Overview
An Era of Hyperconnectivity and Hyperpersonalization
The Emergence of a World with Zero Latency
Zero-latency World - Convergence of 5G and Wi-Fi 6
A Connected World and Threats to Data Privacy
Connected Social Robotics Networks
A Day in the Connected Life in 2030 - Use-case Profiles
Connected Living - Key Growth Drivers
Connected Living - Key Growth Restraints
3. Connected Cities
Connected Cities - The Framework
Connected Cities
Trend 1 - Seamless Interoperability Between Connected Vehicles, Maas Solutions, and City Infrastructure
Trend 2 - Connected Cars as Conduits to Meet City Needs
Trend 3 - Open Government Data that Responds to City Needs
Trend 4 - Adaptive and Connected City Infrastructure that Responds to City Needs
Trend 5 - Resilient and Connected Cities Monitoring Disaster Probabilities and Supplying Information to Citizens - Use Cases
Trend 6 - Self-Sufficient Cities with Smart City Logistics Solutions
Trend 7 - Bridging the Digital Divide with Marginalized Communities
Trend 8 - Surveillance and 'Data'veillance for City Safety
Trend 9 - Connected Grids of the Future
4. Connected Homes
Connected Homes - An Overview
Connected Homes - The Framework
Connected Homes - Growth Opportunities
Connected Homes
Trend 1 - Experience-Rich Homes to Anticipate Resident Needs and Behave Proactively
Trend 2 - Socially and Contextually Aware Robots as Intelligent Companions
Trend 3 - Adaptive Home Environments
Trend 4 - Virtual Guardians
Trend 5 - Personalization
Trend 6 - Homes as Hubs for Free Time
Trend 7 - Home Health Solutions
Trend 8 - Self-sufficient Energy-generating Homes
5. Connected Work
Connected Work - An Overview
Connected Work
Trend 1 - Narrowing the Gap Between Physical Workspaces and Digital Workspaces
Trend 2 - The Connected Enterprise Ecosystem
Trend 3 - End-to-End Connected Work Platforms
Trend 4 - Cloud-to-Edge Data Distribution
Trend 5 - Key Technologies Driving Connected Work
Trend 6 - The Connected Worker of The Future
Trend 7 - Human to Machine Collaboration
Trend 8 - Lights-out Automation
Trend 9 - Future Cyber Human Workforce
6. Growth Opportunity Analysis
Growth Opportunity Levers
Growth Opportunity 1: Digital Workflows
Growth Opportunity 2: Connected Services Ecosystem
Growth Opportunity 3: Internet of Homes
Growth Opportunity 4: Multi-sided Platform Orchestrators
Critical Success Factors for Growth
Conclusions - The Way Forward
7. Next Steps
For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/r/sv5lkk
View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20210308005471/en/
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