Most U.S. Industrial Companies Plan to Implement 5G Within Two Years, Barriers Remain

Stats from the latest findings from the Capgemini Research Institute

Industrial companies are embracing 5G connectivity as a primary enabler of digital transformation and plan to implement the technology within two years. This is spurring interest in private licenses, which nearly half of large industrial companies (47%) intend to apply for, according to the latest findings from the Capgemini Research Institute.

The “5G in Industrial Operations: How Telcos and Industrial companies stand to benefit” study found that 5G is considered a catalyst of digital transformation and that manufacturers expect it to deliver more secure and efficient operations.

The study results comprised responses from over 800 industrial companies’ executives and 150 telecoms executives across 12 countries.

Here are 5 things we learned:

5G is critical to digital transformation: When industrial companies’ executives were asked which technologies will be the most integral to their digital transformation over the next five years, 75% mentioned 5G as a key enabler, ranking second to cloud computing (84%), and ahead of technology innovations such as advanced automation and AI/machine learning. Industrial companies believe that 5G’s versatility, flexibility, and reliability will help address connectivity challenges (a limiting factor to digital transformation for 44% of those polled) and fuel future use cases.

Industrial companies want to move quickly to implement 5G: There is widespread confidence in 5G’s potential, with almost two-thirds of industrial companies (65%) planning to implement it within the first two years of availability. In the US, 68% plan to start using 5G within the first two years. Meanwhile, over a quarter in Italy (35%), France (30%) and Canada (27%) intend to use 5G within the first year. The largest manufacturers are most likely to implement 5G first compared to the broader industry: 74% with annual revenue above $10bn expect to do so within the first two years, compared to 57% with revenue between $500m and $1bn.

33%of industrial companies are planning to apply for their own 5G license and large organizations will take the lead with 47% expressing interest. This is fueled by a desire for greater autonomy and security combined with concerns about telecom operators being too slow in rolling-out 5G public networks. However, there will be regulatory barriers which differ across countries.

“As a solution provider and a manufacturer, we are monitoring the 5G landscape closely and we believe there are multiple benefits to holding our own license. It would allow us to be in full control of our 5G strategy by giving us the freedom to either deploy the network alone or with a telecom operator,” said Gunther May, Head of Technology and Innovation, Business Unit Automation and Electrification at Bosch Rexroth.

Security and operational advantages will drive 5G adoption: When asked about the business reason for investing in 5G, more than half cited more secure operations (54%) and efficiency of operations/cost savings (52%), with the expectation that 5G will help in enabling or enhancing use cases such as real-time edge analytics, video surveillance, remote control of distributed production, AI-enabled or remote controlled motions, remote operations through AR/VR, etc.

Industrial companies will pay more for premium services: Despite uncertainties around the speed of deployment, manufacturers are already willing to pay a premium charge for enhanced 5G connectivity. 72% of industrial companies will pay more for enhanced mobile broadband speed and increased capacity, yet only 54% of telecom operators think there is an appetite for this. This presents an opportunity for telecom operators to consider how they build a highly profitable 5G business model.

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