According to Forrester, between 58% and 77% of the surveyed organizations consider the location of objects, containers, and personnel to be the crucial fundamental functions of IoT solutions.
Sensors monitor pharmaceutical products to ensure product quality, even after leaving the warehouse, since they need temperature control. Sensors can integrate data from sensors with business information systems to provide intuitive reports and analytics.
Internet-connected trackers use long-range networks (LPWANs) to allow businesses to track particular products during their delivery journeys. In the same way, satellite trackers offer monitoring data on an object nearly everywhere globally, including in places that do not have cell coverage. For instance, Volvo uses a cloud-based network (with IoT-enabled devices) to track car parts shipping from various countries. Bluetooth tags and beacons provide monitoring data in smaller, more restricted environments, manage consumer traffic, and deliver marketing communications to consumers.
IoT can diagnose in-transit inventory issues, such as leaks, irregular gestures, and the transport medium’s condition. Maintaining the temperature of perishable goods is also something IoT can trace.
According to the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United States, up to one-third of food perishes en-route each year.
IoT can reduce this waste based on linked sensing technologies. It facilitates the sharing of critical information in real-time with customers, thus alleviating chaos. Traffic delays are one of the most frequent sources of late delivery and supply shortages. IoT can control vehicles’ position and speed by using sensor-enabled systems, and maintenance warnings can be issued.
Delivery firm DHL and tech giant Cisco reported in 2015 that IoT innovations would impact more than $1.9 trillion on the supply chain and logistics business.