Emerging Technologie 724613 NDX
Emerging Technologie 724613 NDX
Emerging Technologie 724613 NDX
Precision Agriculture
Published 30 November 2020 - ID G00724613 - 58 min read
By Analyst(s): Eric Goodness, Kay Sharpington, Emil Berthelsen
Initiatives: Emerging Technologies and Trends Impact on Products and Services
Overview
Key Findings
■ The accelerating deployment of Internet of Things (IoT) endpoints in the agriculture
subsector pushes data, insight and decisions across multiple connected and
invested market sectors.
■ The data and insight generated from these emerging technologies and trends are
transferable across a broad ecosystem of stakeholders in adjacent and seemingly
far-off sectors that is expressed as a de facto “platform business.”
Recommendations
Product leaders looking to develop precision agriculture product planning or expand their
portfolio of technologies must:
■ Ensure that the products appeal to markets with verifiable revenue and margin
returns by identifying which agriculture ecosystem stakeholders will benefit most
from IoT-enabled precision agriculture products.
■ Increase the likelihood of market exits by targeting key ecosystem players that
require ecosystem adoption of precision agriculture to optimize and transform
global agriculture markets.
By the close of 2025, 20% of North American and Western European food processors will
require IoT deployments by farmers and growers as a foundational requirement to supply
products, up from 0% today.
By the close of 2025, at least one national grower in North America, in Europe and in
China will validate and brand “arm-to-table” fresh produce based on a “digital thread”; no
grower makes such an offer today.
Analysis
The Market for Precision Agriculture
Definition of Precision Agriculture
Precision agriculture is a life cycle and ecosystem management approach that converges
IT and operational technology (OT) with OT design patterns to optimize the quality, health,
and yields of crops, animals, farmed aquatic species forestry, and horticultural products.
Figure 1. Emerging Technologies and Trends Impact Radar for Precision Agriculture
The time to impact or “range” is measured in the years to early majority adoption. (Fans of
Geoffrey A. Moore can think of it as the time to cross the chasm.) Early majority adoption
is when technology adoption is “ready for prime time.” It is essential to point out that the
time to technology impact or “range” is not the same as the time to act on the technology.
When and how a technology product or service leader should act is the remit of the
company’s business strategy. Providers that want to be “first-movers” with an emerging
technology or trend need to act far sooner than those that are comfortable waiting for
their competition to compel them into action.
The “mass” component examines the extent of the impact on existing products and
markets. To assess the impact, we explore two main aspects — breadth and depth. The
breadth of impact concerns how many sectors are affected (products, services, markets,
business functions, industries and geographies). The depth of the impact includes an
analysis of the potential disruption to existing products, services and markets.
The objective of this research is to provide technology and service providers (TSPs) with
basic intelligence on how emerging technologies and trends are evolving. Providers can
use this intelligence to determine which are most important to their business and when it
makes sense to advance their products and services by investing in them. Technology
providers should use this Emerging Technologies and Trends Impact Radar to:
1. Identify emerging technologies and trends that are important to the business
2. Determine when to act upon those trends and technologies based on business
strategy
Intelligent Product
Applications Servitization
Smart Robots
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Sample Providers: Vinsa, TerraClear, SWIR Vision Systems, XSUN, Cromai, Occipital Tech,
Descartes Labs, Ceres Imaging, InnerPlant
The use of CV on satellite and drone imagery to determine crop health, fertilizer
percolation, and pest infestation has been the biggest driver of adoption. Advanced CV is
more often used for animal health behavior, particularly for poultry and swine. Gartner
expects customer adoption of advanced CV applications in agriculture to mirror
implementation rates in other industries. For example, customer adoption of CV-based
surveillance applications will grow more than 50% year over year (YoY) for new video
surveillance use cases. Advanced CV delivers operational and business intelligence that
will drive high adoption rates across the industry in the near term.
Emerging use cases include the use of CV to determine crop and animal quality before
shipping to retail outlets and food processors. Leveraging advanced CV is also an
essential capability within smart robots and other autonomous vehicles in agricultural
settings, enabling automation around crop life cycle management and food production.
Common challenges faced when using advanced computer vision models include brittle
and low-fidelity algorithms, reliability, lack of suitable training data, and related ecosystem
dependencies. Some of these challenges are restated by the use of pretrained networks to
accelerate the training process.
Recommended Actions
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Emerging Technology Analysis: Integrate Computer Vision Catalysts for Software Product
Innovation
Edge AI
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Sample Providers: Microsoft, Reality AI, FreeWave, Lanner, FogHorn, Deci, Swim, Octonion,
One Tech, Seeed
Gartner places edge AI in the early majority stage because there is already an extensive
amount of software deployed to offer proximal data value. Namely, AI embedded in IoT
endpoints is a leading revenue opportunity for TSPs and drives early majority adoption.
Manufacturers and their service provider channels seek market differentiation and
revenue uplift by “servitizing” assets. Here, the IoT endpoint (asset) runs AI models to
interpret captured or external data and drives endpoints functions (automation and
actuation). In this case, the AI model is trained (and updated) on a central system and
deployed to the IoT endpoint. An example is a tractor or irrigation system with embedded
technologies. Edge AI will ultimately allow whole classes of agricultural equipment and
infrastructure to function (nearly) autonomously with local resources onboard.
Increasingly, edge AI is a catalyst for adopting broader IoT solutions because of its ability
to reduce solution costs. In connected agricultural environments, cloud-based solutions
are either unavailable because of issues related to public network services or cost-
prohibitive solutions because assets require connection to cloud systems for intelligence.
A key element to drive adoption of IoT and edge architectures is model optimization on
low-cost processors in “brownfield” farm machinery and infrastructure. In this scenario,
legacy assets can contribute to diagnostic and maintenance capabilities where none
existed previously. The distributed intelligence then becomes an incredible platform for
software services where the users may sweat their infrastructure investments.
Common use cases for edge AI in precision agriculture solutions include video
surveillance and monitoring, audio event detection, and anomaly detection and data
normalization in data acquisition and farm equipment analyses. Common challenges met
when using edge AI include the lack of robust IT and OT system skills at the farm level,
managing the rebalancing of processing capacity and energy consumption, storing the
parameters of learning and inferencing on resource-constrained devices, as well as
release management of models on distributed devices in the field, underwater or in the air.
■ Integrators and managed service providers (MSPs) offering bundled and integrated
applications, infrastructure, and smart connected products as managed services
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Strategy
Intelligent Applications
Back to Top
■ Control terrestrial or aquatic feed levels in real-time from any internet-enabled device.
Additionally, advanced analytics identify potential equipment and infrastructure
failures, anomalous activities, and events across all farming modalities for proactive
remediation.
The multisector ecosystem that supports agricultural-related markets is likely the best
example of the need and the value of combining proximal data with data from a diverse
array of generators and providers. IoT sensor data, weather service feeds, data feeds from
farming cooperatives and local universities relating to pest infestations help farm
management systems provide better decision support, advise with better prescriptions,
and make improved operational decisions.
Ultimately, operational visibility, analytics, and decision support require sufficient reporting
and visualization capabilities to ensure knowledge transfer, historical perspective, and
inferencing. Visualization in these intelligent applications is a differentiator for knowledge
transfer to constituencies largely unfamiliar with IT, statistics, or data science.
All applications relating to agriculture will ultimately become intelligent via the use of AI,
making the mass for intelligent applications very high.
The challenge for product leaders is to determine the traditional forms of analyses that
are most useful for the various forms of agriculture, for example, standard key
performance indicators (KPIs) and metrics within manufacturing include throughput, cycle
time, material yield variance, OEE, TEE, golden batch, and Monte Carlo. Similarly,
intelligent applications for precision agriculture offer outputs and analyses for both
farming and operational insight such as:
Just as there is an incredible diversity of crops and animals, there will be a corresponding
diversity of applications and providers in the market. A key pain point for large food
processors, retailers, and crop insurers is the diversity of applications focused on just a
few crops. Applications that focus on dairy animals and cattle do not necessarily extend
to lamb, poultry or swine. Similarly, applications with advanced analytics for corn, cane, or
soy rarely extend to grapes or soft-stone fruit. Ecosystem partners outside of the farm
seek solutions that can aggregate their portfolios — investments and risk — into a “single
screen.”
Recommended Actions
Recommended Reading
Short-Range Impacts
AI Implementation and Operations Services
Back to Top
While the market continues to grow with investments that explore various AI technologies
and techniques, a shortage of expertise required to build, scale, and operate AI-centric
projects and solutions impedes its full potential. Such challenges are especially true
within the agricultural sector.
Thus, AI implementation and operations service providers have exhibited strong growth.
These services have helped clients within the agricultural sector move beyond strategy
and pilot projects to building business processes using machine learning, robotics, and
other AI-powered approaches to generate new revenue opportunities across the enterprise.
Lightweight prototypes and free POCs are increasingly common as much of the
agricultural sector’s value-added services come from the hardware OEMs and the IoT and
AI software vendors. The services to help clients scale these AI-centric initiatives beyond
production is still emerging. The use of third-party services to apply AI to operations and
the go-to-market process is accelerating. Service providers are vital to helping growers
connect to the vast and powerful agricultural ecosystem, which spans banking, insurance,
cooperative and processors, retailers, and suppliers.
Mass: Medium
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Excel in a Crowded Market
Midrange Impacts
IoT Platforms
Back to Top
■ Insurers and financial services can quantify and manage risk based on yield quantity
and quality.
■ Food and commodities processors and cooperatives understand the amount and
quality of yield from the platform to harvesting to acceptance.
■ Chemical fertilizer and seed stock vendors can better project needs and compress
the time between buying cycles.
A crowded marketplace and a lack of investment by service providers to create robust and
competitive service practices to plan and build a broad continuum of platforms inhibit the
IoT platform market. However, few IoT platforms differentiate their value for precision
agriculture.
Mass: Medium
IoT has broad appeal across all sectors in terms of value derived from connecting and
analyzing assets and processes. Initial estimations of market opportunity point to a more
extensive installed base of consumer IoT (B2C) and commercial IoT. However, the total
economic impact of IoT within industrial enterprises will prove to be a broader market in
the long term as IoT begins to augment and replace the functions of OT systems.
What has distinguished the IoT platform market over the past few years is the impact of
non-IT, nontraditional buying centers that drive increasing demand for IoT solutions. This
trend will increase as IoT becomes more entwined with digital business. The investments
required to be competitive are rising through the use of cloud and traditional analytics and
innovative AI-ML techniques.
Recommended Actions
■ Extend the IoT platform into digital business initiatives by developing value-added
IoT applications and technology alliances to expand the impact of outcomes.
Recommended Reading
Smart Spaces
Back to Top
For precision agriculture, the main focus for smart spaces will center on tracking livestock
and poultry movement and receiving early indicators for changes in health, birth activity,
body temperature, hydration, and unhealthful activity. Smart spaces are a combinatorial
approach to value creation that generally involves IoT and various AI forms, including
computer vision, robotics, and sensors embedded within the environment and placed on
livestock, poultry, and aquatic environments.
The range identified for “smart spaces” set a threshold for the market. While many
elements of IoT and AI apply to grow and livestock environments, the drive to eliminate
human labor and automate the life cycle of livestock and crops is an early stage. The cost
associated with smart space investments will require more lessons to separate soft cash
value from explicit hard cash gains (and a reduction in the cost to adopt such solutions).
Using the dairy market as an example of use cases and early success, smart spaces have
proven effective by leveraging:
■ Robotic feeding and milking machines have combined to improve the health of the
dairy stock. In some cases, dairy animals choose when to be milked.
■ Connected and automated buildings allow for free passage by the animals,
depending on animal health and the weather.
These emerging systems employ deep learning algorithms to detect abnormal behavior
relating to physical activity, aggressiveness, and feeding patterns, creating unique profiles
and understanding each animal’s habits.
Smart spaces also extend to traditional glasshouse growing environments and the
emergence of urban vertical farms. Many vertical farm operations have found that
leveraging IoT and AI can obviate investments in legacy building intelligence and
management systems. Vertical farming represents some of the most complex
environments that span IT and OT to combine IoT, computer vision, augmented
intelligence, process automation, and robotics.
Common challenges faced when creating smart spaces include the technical debt and
costs for integrating AI with diverse operational technologies such as dairy management,
building intelligence, and lighting controls.
Mass: High
Smart spaces have enjoyed early adoption from vertical sectors such as commercial real
estate and public sector multifamily housing; however, the emerging market offers
significant value to the agricultural industry.
A major catalyst to the emergence of smart spaces in agriculture are requirements to:
■ Improve the health, welfare, and living conditions of livestock and poultry.
Recommended Actions
■ Work with ecosystem vendors, such as retailers and agricultural suppliers, to identify
bundled solutions to help growers create new, branded offerings for the retailers’
customers.
Recommended Reading
Long-Range Impacts
Distributed Ledger
Back to Top
Interest in distributed ledger technologies (DLT) relating to the agricultural ecosystem and
precision agriculture is tapering, and actual production implementations at scale are rare.
Many large enterprises within the agricultural ecosystem, such as financial services and
insurance, food processors, and retailers, are in the exploratory phase and struggle to
identify business cases where this technology can provide more value than alternative
technologies.
Early adopter projects tend to be unique business processes, have intercompany flows,
and operate where commercial software is not available. Common use cases of
distributed ledgers (and blockchain) include:
■ Grower identity: Growers and the broader supply chain register to create a unique
identifier. Each participant is recognized as a trusted player in the supply chain,
including financial services, insurance, transportation and logistics, retailers,
government, and other services.
■ Yield digitization: Farm yields such as livestock, crops, aquatics are digitized through
tokenization, creating liquidity to enable trade. Yield digitization increases
commodity markets’ value through the participation of important trusted members
spanning production, processing, and retail.
■ Transactions history: Farmers use the digitized ledger for tracking transactions and
income, which is shared with suppliers and bankers which eases growers’ access to
financial services.
The driving forces for adopting DLT in precision agriculture solutions will be ecosystem
partners beyond the growers. Gartner believes that the use of DLT by growers will be
forced upon growers as a requirement to participate within an agriculture ecosystem. The
primary forces driving the adoption of DLT by growers will be financial services, food
processors, and retailers.
Mass: High
The potential for digital ledgers and related technology solutions is massive in the
agricultural sector. Gartner estimates that DLTs are relevant to agricultural production,
including cultivation, fertilization, feeding, and harvesting.
The digitization of the precision agriculture supply chain is supported by DLTs where
physical resources and processes (e.g., inputs such as seed, stock, fertilizer, feed) and the
resulting yields are monitored and represented via digital technologies in the form of
sensor readings, digital signatures, RFID tagging (among other methods) and recorded in
digital ledgers and/or blockchains as an immutable record for participants in the
agricultural ecosystem. The adoption of precision agriculture solutions by growers
establishes the digital platform, enabling block validation to create a trusted chain of
transactions that extends trust that spans the farm, processors, distributors, retailers, and
consumers. Agriculture involves a variety of entities including farmers, suppliers (seed,
fertilizer, machinery, etc.), traders, financial institutions and government organizations.
Blockchain’s capability to ensure data integrity across multiple parties and track the
provenance of goods can be useful to improve efficiency. But, blockchain products and
services that offer a compelling value proposition that can be adopted with a high level of
confidence are not yet available broadly. We expect this to evolve through a combination
of technology maturity, solutions from blockchain companies and adoption by large
agricultural companies.
Private investment in precision agriculture inclusive of DLTs is likely the most expeditious
and effective way to secure food supplies and other agricultural output so that
governments cannot (and have demonstrated very little level of effort to build).
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Back to Top
Sample Providers: AGCO (Fendt), DOTS Technology, John Deere, Autonomous Tractor
Corp., CNH Industrial (Case IH)
■ The ability to build and update high-definition maps over large geographic areas
■ The cost-effectiveness and robustness of local connectivity for cloud services and
the cost of onboard local compute and edge AI for operations based solely on
proximal data
The use of autonomous vehicles will likely be adopted broadly in grower environments
sooner than logistics applications as in-field regulations are embryonic to nonexistent in
most regions. Common use cases for autonomous vehicles span the agricultural life cycle
spanning cultivation, planting, fertilization, and harvesting. The most common
impediment to adoption is cost. Gartner expects that product servitization is likely a
business model trend that will positively influence autonomous farm equipment adoption.
There are obvious differences between mobility services serving various transportation
and logistics functions; however, much of the technologies that advance fully
autonomous driving on highways and streets will also push farming to new output and
efficiency levels.
The impact of fully autonomous driving and operation of farming equipment offers
society and business mostly positive effects, including removing human resources from
the growing life cycle in both mature and emerging economies. Autonomous vehicles
cultivate, plant, feed, and harvest at much greater volumes, with much greater precision at
optimal moments, at any time, which improves yield while lowering the cost of inputs
throughout the growing life cycle.
The rise of autonomy may change the landscape of players in the growing life cycle.
Automated growing may inspire more processors to become growers or retailers and
cooperatives to become growers. While the potential for business models and market
disintermediation changes is enormous, the current cost structure of autonomous vehicles
in agriculture will emerge slowly.
■ Disrupt the farm vehicle market by driving development that is innovative in terms of
capabilities and radically reduces the cost to deploy autonomous technologies
today.
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Product Servitization
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■ Security services
The ultimate expression of value enabled by product servitization is that assets that are
always connected, visible, and manageable allow OEMs or OEM partners to offer capital
assets as outcomes priced as recurring operating charges rather than a nonrecurring
capital asset acquisition. When products are “servitized,” the user acquires asset-based
services (outputs), scoped within agreements defining the fitness for purpose and the
desired outcomes relating to performance, availability, and quality of output.
Product servitization applies common IoT design patterns and industry frameworks to
provide an ecosystem of stakeholders — such as enterprises, manufacturers, and financial
intermediaries — the data and control required to ensure asset effectiveness and
availability. Key to this emerging business model’s success is the use of embedded
technologies, advanced analytics, and AI techniques for optimized functionality and to
provide users and service providers asset insight and control.
Sample providers: Aria Systems; John Deere; Particle; Samsung Electronics; Siemens;
Hello Tractor, Xylem; SCHÄFER WERKE Group; Michelin; Zuora
Common use cases for product servitization in agriculture include the sale of “mobile”
assets such as irrigation, planting and harvesting equipment based on usage. Companies
such as Caterpillar and Michelin have made strategic acquisitions to servitize their
products to direct end-user customers such as Michelin’s “tires and trucks by the mile” or
through their distribution channels such as Caterpillar’s use of acquired IoT and digital
commerce software to enable the reseller channel’s ability to provide heavy industrial
equipment on a usage basis. Increasingly, Gartner sees storage containers and tanks, and
air compressors as a growing market for servitized products. The most common
impediment to product servitization is any approach to risk mitigation by manufacturers
and service providers. If the asset is large or if an asset integrates into the physical plant,
it is nearly impossible to remove the risk inherent in at-will contracts associated with as-a-
service structures. Often, TSPs are challenged when working with an OEM to create a
pricing structure that removes upfront costs for deployment, makes a minimum contract
term, or avoids pressures to assume liquidated damages commensurate with lost
opportunity nonperformance.
Gartner believes that offering large, mobile farm equipment on a usage basis will
transform farming in emerging economies unable to afford assets to meet the growing
food demand for a growing middle class.
Technical inhibitors to the adoption of product servitization include the complexity of end-
to-end IoT and AI business solutions and difficulties relating to specific technical
challenges, such as device management, security, integration, and information
management. Key commercial inhibitors include the relatively immature product
servitization business model, challenging SLAs across the ecosystem, nonperformance
penalties, and the opening of access to manage assets, which are considered critical
infrastructure or within security instrumented environments.
Recommended Actions
■ Create loyalty with OEMs that want to servitize products by creating service catalogs
for their users and partners based on access to data spanning the customer and
ecosystem and by creating a spectrum of self-service capabilities to reduce user
objections.
Recommended Reading
Smart Robots
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Sample Providers: GEA, Soft Robotics, Root, ecoRobotix, Harvest Automation, Honeycomb,
Naïo Technologies, WIWAM, Livestock Robotics, Small Robot, SkyBridge UAS
Agricultural robots automate a range of repetitive tasks for growers. Common use cases
for robots in agriculture include:
■ Harvesting
■ Phenotyping
Smart robots will grow modestly over the next few years and accelerate beginning in
2023. Early adoption centers on drones surveying fields to assess crop health and pest
infestations. New venture capital (VC) investments into robotic startups have totaled $2.2
billion between 2017-2019, but fluctuated significantly in the last three years based on
PitchBook investment data. Just under $54 million of the tracked investments focused on
robotics dedicated to agriculture during that period.
Common challenges faced when creating smart robots include navigation, harvesting
capabilities, broad phenotyping catalogs to extend usefulness, conversational abilities to
increase the ease of operation, applying swarm analytics, and meshed intelligence,
leveraging AI within closed-loop systems in farm operations (especially vertical farming
environments).
Mass: High
Robots and robotic innovations apply across all agricultural domains (such as forestry,
arable crops, aquaculture, and animal husbandry). Today’s robots focus on tasks within
the agricultural life cycle where automated tasks are equivalent or exceed the efficiency of
full-time equivalent (FTE) headcount or large, purpose-built machines.
Many early adopters are finding success in pairing terrestrial robots and aerial vehicles
(drones) as a practical approach for crop life cycle management. Robotics for livestock
management is a growing opportunity to use automated services such as milking stations
for dairy and aggression management for poultry. Robots offer growers a chance to scale
FTE labor impact without the burden of human resource issues and challenges.
Likely the largest impediment to adoption is cost over the next five years. However, Gartner
expects to see manufacturers (and service providers) enter this market with robots offered
as a utility (pay-per-use) model. There is a strong possibility that service providers may
engage some growers to assume primary and secondary farming responsibilities. Such
engagements may likely guarantee yield (or yield quality) and recognize contingent fees
based on successfully meeting yield and yield quality outcomes (in addition to service
fees).
Recommended Actions
■ Seek to fulfill the life cycle value of robotic solutions by building, buying, or
borrowing terrestrial and air-based capabilities as part of farm management
solutions.
Recommended Reading
The Impact
■ Autonomous UAVs
Dramatic Changes in Global Demographics Impacts Demand for Food and Labor
Globally, Gartner forecasts that the installed base of 89.7 million IoT endpoints in 2019
will grow to nearly 379 million installed IoT endpoints in 2026. That is a compound
annual growth rate (CAGR) of just under 23%. Note that these IoT endpoints do not reflect
the broader installed base of IoT endpoints in support of precision agriculture. This
endpoints pool will include mobility assets and infrastructure for transportation and
logistics (such as fleet and cold-chain management and related food security monitoring).
The Future of Precision Agriculture Depends Upon Reverse Innovation and Jugaad
Innovation
The Emerging Technologies and Trends Impact Radar Research and Methodology
As previously mentioned, the Emerging Technologies and Trends Impact Radar content
analyzes and illustrates two significant aspects of impact:
Analysts evaluate range and mass independently and score them each on a one to five
Likert-type scale:
■ For range, this scoring determines in which radar ring the emerging technologies and
trends will appear.
■ For mass, the score determines the size of the radar point.
Mass in the Emerging Technologies and Trends Impact Radar estimates how substantial
an impact the technology or trend will have on existing products and markets. Mass is
also scored on a five-point scale — with one being very low impact and five being very
high impact. Emerging technologies and trends with a score of one are not included in the
radar. When evaluating mass, Gartner analysts examine the breadth of impact across
existing products (specifically, sectors affected) and the extent of the disruption to
existing product capabilities.
The graphic is also supported with concise text to inform the reader on Gartner’s rationale
for the ratings applied to range and mass and the placement of emerging technologies
and trends within the Impact Radar. The document also offers recommendations to
product leaders that span issues such as talent sourcing, targeting key sectors and
prioritizing development resources and product/service features.
The principal objective of the Emerging Technologies and Trends Impact Radar is to
identify the level of maturity of emerging technologies and tends to determine when these
technologies and trends move to early majority adoption. Early majority adoption is
characterized as proven, commercial off-the-shelf (COTS) technologies that require less
customization than early iterations of technology. Most importantly, the designation of
early majority means that the market for an emerging technology or trend maintains the
potential for innovation and evolution, whereas the mature majority adoption does not.
By identifying the time to early majority adoption and maturation, Gartner’s Emerging
Technologies and Trends Impact Radar offers a reference point for planning ahead of the
mature majority. In a mature majority market, growth is challenging, differentiation rarely
occurs and operating profit margin rates only decrease. By focusing on early majority
maturity, product leaders can better:
Though some emerging technologies and trends may reside on both the Emerging
Technologies and Trends Impact Radar and the Hype Cycle, the analysis is differentiated
from Gartner’s Hype Cycle assessments in three meaningful ways:
■ Emerging Technologies and Trends Impact Radars are written for technology and
service providers, not technology adopters.
■ Emerging Technologies and Trends Impact Radars assess what is real — regardless
of existing hype.
■ Emerging Technologies and Trends Impact Radars focus on how far a technology
lies from early majority adoption to assist technology leaders in deciding when and
how to factor it into their product planning.
ML machine learning
OT operational technology
REG2 regrowth
UN United Nations
UV ultraviolet
In addition to Gartner’s IoT forecast, multiple publicly available resources were used,
including:
■ The State of Food Security and Nutrition in the World 2020, Food and Agriculture
Organization (FAO).
■ The State of Food Security and Nutrition in the World 2020, Food and Agriculture
Organization (FAO).
■ Computer Vision With Deep Learning for Plant Phenotyping in Agriculture: A Survey,
arXivLabs.
The multisector ecosystem that supports agricultural-related markets is likely the best
example of the need and the value of combining organically generated data with data
from a diverse array of generators and providers. IoT sensor data, weather service feeds,
data feeds from farming cooperatives and local universities relating to pest infestations
help farm management systems provide better decision support, advise with better
prescriptions and to make improved operational decisions.
Ultimately, operational visibility, analytics and decision support require sufficient reporting
and visualization capabilities to ensure knowledge transfer, historical perspective and
inferencing.
Virtual FTEs
As robots and drones are generally purpose-built machinery to support a single, or a range
of actions for a process, their efficacy is largely built upon the use of vision (including
spectral analyses) and sound (including language) to provide significant insight and
decision support relating to fertilization, pest management and harvesting.
Gartner believes the extension service bureau will radically change over the next few
years. Once a hyperlocal and face-to-face exchange will transform into data-centric and
analytical services. Partnerships and joint ventures between farmers, universities,
businesses (for example, chemicals, fertilizers, seeds), including precision agriculture
vendors, will supplement legacy extension services.
The initial challenge will become balancing the societal benefit of digital extension
services while supporting some form of financial gain for businesses to fuel ongoing
innovation. Regional private-public partnerships (PPP) between entities such as
organizations within local governments, the World Bank, and private charitable
foundations will likely become the first form of digital extension services.
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Advanced Computer Vision AI Implementation and Operations IoT Platforms Distributed Ledger
Services
Smart Robots