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Saturday, 10 December 2016

IDC shares global robotics predictions for 2017

The IDC Manufacturing Insights Worldwide Commercial Robotics programme has published IDC FutureScape: Worldwide Robotics 2017 Predictions, which highlights the key drivers for robotics and how these are likely to shape the development of robotics in the planning horizon of 2017 through 2020.

"Technological development in artificial intelligence, computer vision, navigation, micro-electro-mechanical systems (MEMS) sensors, and semiconductor technologies continue to drive innovation in the capability, performance, autonomy, ease of use, and cost-effectiveness of industrial and service robots," says Dr Jing Bing Zhang, Research Director, Worldwide Robotics and Asia Pacific Manufacturing Insights, IDC Asia/Pacific.

Dr Zhang also revealed the strategic top predictions and major robotics trends that are set to present opportunities and challenges to IT leaders in 2017 and beyond:

Robot-as-a-service. By 2019, 30% of commercial service robotic applications will be in the form of a robot-as-a-service business model, reducing costs for robot deployment.

Chief Robotics Officer. By 2019, 30% of leading organisations will implement a chief robotics officer role and/or define a robotics-specific function within the business.

Evolving landscape. By 2020, companies will have a greater choice of vendors as new players enter the US$80-billion ICT market to support robotics deployment.

Robotics talent crunch. By 2020, robotics growth will accelerate the talent race, leaving 35% of robotics-related jobs vacant while the average salary increases by at least 60%.

Regulation catches up. By 2019, governments will begin implementing robotics-specific regulations to preserve jobs and to address concerns of security, safety, and privacy.

Cloud-based marketplace. By 2020, 60% of robots will depend on cloud-based software to define new skills, cognitive capabilities, and applications, leading to the formation of a robotics cloud marketplace.

Smart, safe robots. By 2018, 30% of all new robotic deployments will be smart collaborative robots that operate three times faster than today's robots and are safe for work around humans.

Networked intelligence. By 2020, 40% of commercial robots will become connected to a mesh of shared intelligence, resulting in 200% improvement in overall robotic operational efficiency.

Beyond the factory. By 2019, 35% of leading organisations in logistics, health, utilities, and resources will explore the use of robots to automate operations.

Robotics in e-commerce. By 2018, 45% of the 200 leading global e-commerce and omnichannel commerce companies will deploy robotics systems in their order fulfilment warehousing and delivery operations.

"Robotics will continue to accelerate innovation, thus disrupting and changing the paradigm of business operations in many industries. IDC expects to see stronger growth of robotics adoption outside the traditional manufacturing factory floor, including logistics, health, utilities and resources industries. We encourage end-user companies to embrace and assess how robotics can sharpen their company's competitive edge by improving quality, increasing operational productivity and agility, and enhancing experiences of all stakeholders," said Dr Zhang.

Interested?

IDC hosted a webcast titled IDC FutureScape: Worldwide Robotics 2017 Predictions on November 22, 2016 led by Dr Zhang. Listen to the webcast

To learn more about other IDC FutureScape documents and upcoming webinars on the latest technology predictions, visit the FutureScapes Library.

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