Some of you may remember that we put together a legal tech industry landscape a few months ago. We are excited to share our second such report on the real estate industry, this time spearheaded by intern Naomi Grossman (shout-out to Jake Quan for finalizing the data). As was the case last time, this report was created as a starting place for deep dives and due diligence. We hope it is helpful and look forward to hearing your feedback!
Legal Tech Industry Landscape
One of our fabulous associate interns, Jodie Miller, put together an extensive report on the legal tech industry landscape - please check it out below. We hope this document can serve as a resource for future deeper dives and due diligence sessions on companies in the legal tech space. This project is a work in progress, and we hope it can be a useful starting part for anyone who comes across it. We look forward to hearing everyone's feedback and additions.
So, You Bet Your SaaS on IoT
Various estimates peg the number of Internet of Things (IoT) devices deployed in the market to be between 6 to 7 billion, and that number is expected to grow over 8 times in the next 3 years. To illustrate an example of an IoT device, imagine a parking spot with sensors installed. These sensors send data on the availability of that parking spot to a local internet-enabled gateway that ultimately communicates the information to the car drivers (through their navigation systems) in that vicinity – in this case, and in any similar scenario in which sensors enable communication between physical objects and Internet-enabled systems, we are talking about IoT devices.
The market opportunity for SaaS companies within IoT becomes huge once these devices become more pervasive. Today, the primary market opportunity for SaaS companies is centered around enterprise, web, and mobile sectors, with industries more skewed toward modern non-traditional (non brick-and-mortar) sectors. That market is less than $20 billion. With IoT devices, many traditional industries such as energy, utilities in general, construction, transportation, and the environment will be ushered in the 21st century of connectivity. That means stakes are much higher, as these multi-billion dollar industries are much bigger than the modern enterprises. There is a reason GE calls IoT the Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT).
Not only that, we anticipate that IoT will bring brand new challenges – which subsequently pave the way for opportunities – for current and next generation SaaS companies to build services and products. For example, current generation solutions might not work as they are to get similar intelligence, data, and analytics for IoT devices such as sensors and actuators.
Similarly, applications for Quality of Service (QoS), Security, Billing, Maintenance and so on all have to be reimagined (or retrofitted) in the world of IoT. As far as data is concerned, what we call “Big Data” today will look like rounding error in 3 years with the amount of data generated by 50 billion IoT devices.