Connected products promise smarter experiences, real-time insights, and ongoing value long after launch. Yet many of them underperform in the real world, not because the ideas were flawed, but because execution broke down where it mattered most.
Across industries, we see a familiar pattern: strong innovation upfront, followed by missed expectations post-launch. Devices ship, apps go live, customers onboard. But reliability issues surface, updates slow down, and operational complexity takes over.
The challenge isn’t vision. It’s execution.
The Real Problem: Fragmented Execution Across the Stack
Building a connected product is never just about the device. Success depends on how well multiple layers work together:
- Embedded software that runs reliably on constrained hardware
- Supporting applications and cloud platforms that scale securely
- Testing and validation that reflect real-world conditions
- Operational readiness to support products once they’re in the field
When these layers are engineered in silos, cracks appear after launch. Firmware updates introduce regressions. Apps lag behind device capabilities. Testing doesn’t catch edge cases. Support teams lack visibility. Over time, customer trust erodes.
Industry research consistently highlights this gap: connected products struggle not at launch, but in sustaining performance, quality, and scale over time. In fact, a third of all completed IoT projects are not considered a success.
Together, they form a digital nervous system for healthcare: one that learns continuously and adapts dynamically.
What High-Performing Connected Products Do Differently
Products that succeed beyond launch share a few common traits:
- Strong Embedded and Supporting Software, Engineered Together
Embedded systems, device interfaces, mobile apps, and cloud services are designed as one system, not separate projects. Decisions at the firmware level account for lifecycle updates, data flows, and user experience from day one. - Testing Maturity Across the Entire Stack
High-performing teams invest early in unit testing, SIL and HIL validation, and automated CI/CD pipelines. Quality is built in continuously, before products reach customers, not after issues appear in the field. - Lifecycle Readiness from Day One
Operational support isn’t an afterthought. Monitoring, OTA strategies, incident response, and Tier 1–4 support models are planned alongside development, ensuring products can evolve safely and reliably after launch.
Orion’s Execution-Focused Engineering Approach
At Orion, we work with enterprises that already understand the innovation challenge. Where we add value is helping teams execute consistently across the connected product lifecycle.
Our approach is grounded in a few principles:
- Software-first connected product engineering, spanning embedded systems, apps, cloud, data, and AI
- Rigorous testing and validation, from unit testing to real-hardware simulation, embedded into CI/CD pipelines
- Lifecycle support at scale, including global Tier 1–4 support enhanced with GenAI and knowledge automation
- Outcome-driven delivery, powered by Engineering Centers of Innovation (COIs) and cross-functional PODs aligned to product milestones
This execution discipline, combined with a global nearshore and offshore delivery model, helps teams reduce risk, accelerate releases, and sustain product performance long after launch.
Beyond Launch Is Where Connected Products Are Won
- Connected products don’t fail because teams lack creativity. They fail when execution across software, testing, and operations doesn’t keep pace with ambition.
- Getting it right requires engineering depth, testing maturity, and lifecycle readiness, working together as one system.
- That’s the difference between launching a connected product and delivering one that performs, scales, and earns trust in the real world.
- Execution doesn’t just support innovation. It determines whether connected products succeed beyond launch.