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Research: 90% of voice assistants to control smart homes by 2024

July 29, 2019

Data from Juniper Research found that the number of voice assistants used to access smart home devices will reach 555 million by 2024; up from 105 million in 2019. By 2024, Juniper Research expects more than 90 per cent of voice assistants to be used to control smart home devices; driven by increased participation from Chinese manufacturers.

The research, Smart Homes: Strategic Opportunities, Business Models & Competitive Landscape 2019-2024, found that voice assistants are an increasingly crucial element in the smart home; providing interoperability platforms that enable seamless control of the whole smart home.

Aggressive Strategy Keeps Amazon in the Lead

The research found that Amazon leads the way, thanks to advanced hub features included in the Echo Plus, heavy investment from its Alexa Fund, and Alexa Skills access; enabling a vast third-party app ecosystem. Recent high-profile acquisitions such as Blink, Ring and eero will further bolster its ability to innovate across the smart home.

Google will capitalise on its acquisition of Nest, adding Assistant in a new range of devices such as the Google Nest Hub Max; transforming its proposition in the smart home market. Juniper Research believes that Google’s investment in AI will enable it to add more intelligent and autonomous functions; providing a compelling differentiator. It should bolster this with heavy investment in partnerships to further build out its ecosystem.

Chinese Manufacturers to Gain Momentum in Domestic Market

Chinese manufacturers are increasingly developing more advanced voice assistants, such as iFlytek, Baidu and Huawei. While current penetration of voice assistants is low in China, Juniper Research anticipates low cost smart speakers will drive usage of assistants in China in the smart home to over 100 million in 2024, from just 4 million in 2019.

Chinese influence will be limited to the domestic market however, given security concerns around Huawei in the US. The sensitive role of voice assistants means they will become the centrepiece of concerns if launched in Western markets; limiting their overall potential.

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