IIC Journal of Innovation 7th Edition | Page 34

A Practical Framework To Turn IoT Technology Into Operational Capability Figure 1: Companies have many capability gaps related to IoT (Adapted from https://www.mckinsey.com/global- themes/internet-of-things/our-insights/taking-the-pulse-of-enterprise-iot ) simulation laboratory that are connected to a predictive maintenance model which operates in a well-controlled and monitored environment. It is quite another to do that for 300 pumps with a variety of makes and models in a harsh refinery environment where connectivity and latency issues impact the quality of data received from the IoT hardware. Making IoT successful is not just solving engineering and interoperability challenges, but also improving the business and its processes. meet [Information Technology] IT project requirements. However, they underestimate the degree of impact that these projects will have on their applications. But IoT business solutions generally cannot be fully implemented technically or fully realized commercially until they are seamlessly integrated with relevant business applications to help improve core business processes.” The Cisco survey 6 shows that organizations are looking to use data from IoT projects to have a real impact on their business: Operational capabilities most often manifest in an organization’s workflows or business processes, as the McKinsey survey highlights. Gartner Research 5 supports this notion. “Companies typically focus significant attention on instrumenting their ‘things’ and choosing an IoT platform hub to    Improved