July 2011 |
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Berg Insight says increasing adoption of smart home technologies will result in a US$ 9.5 billion market in 2015
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Gothenburg,
Sweden – July 1, 2011: According to a new research report by Berg
Insight, the number of new smart home installations worldwide was 0.44
million in 2010. Growing at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 65
percent, this number is expected to reach 5.38 million by 2015. The
total revenues will simultaneously grow at a CAGR of 32.8 percent from
US$ 2.3 billion in 2010 to almost US$ 9.5 billion in 2015.
Smart homes and connected home
technologies have been around for decades, but up till recently, this
has been a niche segment either for the very affluent or extreme
technophiles. “Things are changing for this industry due to a perfect
confluence of market, regulatory, strategic and technology trends”,
according to the report’s lead analyst Alan A. Varghese. “First is the
pull from consumers in the mobile age, who desire to use products such
as iPhones and iPads to control their lifestyles through user-friendly
interfaces. The regulatory drivers come from governments, whereby
countries and utilities are mandated to better control the generation,
distribution and consumption of power in residences. The strategic push
comes from new entrants such as broadband providers who are already
inside consumers’ homes and are looking for the next opportunities to
increase ARPU, reduce churn and become complete solution providers.
Finally the technology piece is coming together with increasing focus
on interoperability, even as the cost of modules, chipsets, and
software is trending down”, says Varghese.
[an error occurred while processing this directive]There is an increasing shift in
smart home technology adoption from custom and luxury residences to
mainstream and production homes. Whereas only 0.1 percent of mainstream
homes had any form of automation in 2010, almost 4 percent will have
that by 2015. Furthermore, since new housing construction is in a slump
worldwide, vendors are focusing their attention on retrofit of existing
housing stock, and easy-to-deploy technologies such as wireless. Berg
Insight finds that this market will soon be crowded with
dealer-installers from traditional industries such as security service
providers, as well as new entrants such as broadband, wireless and
utilities service providers, so finding the right partnerships,
business models and pricing is key to success.
About Berg Insight
Berg Insight offers premier business
intelligence to the telecom industry. We produce concise reports
providing key facts and strategic insights about pivotal developments
in our focus areas. Our vision is to be the most valuable source of
intelligence for our customers.
For further information visit Twitter: www.twitter.com/berginsight
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