Cities around the globe are beginning
to build out new digital services such as smart lighting, traffic, waste
management and data analytics to reduce costs, tap new sources of revenue,
create new innovation business districts and improve the overall quality of
urban life. The previous blog (“How to Make Money from Smart Cities”) identified the great opportunities
for the technology vendors and partners to help to create and operate these
digitally smart cities of the future.
The Cisco Smart City Business
Architecture identifies a set of essential requirements in a number of different
business layers essential for delivering and operating a successful smart city
initiative. In order to measure this
opportunity, we developed a detailed economic model based on the business
architecture. We chose Seattle in the
USA as a representative city, with roughly 3 million people in the greater
metropolitan area, to quantify the potential opportunity available to
technology providers. Our model smart
city initiative included covering 30 per cent of the city area with a Wi-Fi
network and four key smart city solutions - traffic incident management, smart
lighting, smart parking, safety & security.
In addition, we included the technology platforms, operational
capabilities, and services in the Smart City Business Architecture. All of the
services and solutions were modelled as managed services, generating an annual
revenue stream to the provider.
Creating such a smart city solution
for a city like Seattle could generate approximately $32 million in new
technology and services revenues for technology vendors and partners. This revenue is distributed across the
architecture categories as follows:
There are
roughly 1,900 cities throughout the world with populations of 250,000 or
more. Twenty-six of these cities have in
excess of 10 million inhabitants. Making
some very conservative assumptions on potential smart city deployments based on
city size, we estimate that just over one-quarter (or 27%) of the world’s
cities are viable candidates for smart city solutions over the next 3 to 5
years. That equates to a global market
opportunity of $7.5 billion of new annual revenues for technology vendors to
help cities to deploy smart city initiatives to create significant new value
for their cities and citizens.
Cities will need vendors
and partners to provide solutions and services to make their smart city
initiatives a success. There are
significant sources of new revenue available to providers who can deliver
compelling solutions and value in each of the layers of the smart cities business
architecture.
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