Remote Subscriber Identity Module (SIM) card provisioning is becoming a reality for IoT devices. Embedded SIM, or “eSIM,” technology is opening doors to new innovations and business benefits enabled by enhanced connectivity and security.
eSIM dates back to the SIM cards used by cellular carriers to identify and authenticate subscribers on their networks. These integrated circuits originated in 1991 and contained unique subscriber information on a chip approximately the size of a credit card. By 1996, the form factor was drastically reduced which resulted in further adoption by mobile handset manufacturers. Over the next 20 years, SIM cards reduced in size and increased in capabilities. These traditional SIM cards locked users into a single carrier network and technology, making it inefficient and expensive to change carriers or upgrade to new cellular technologies.
Today, eSIMs are available to alleviate the aforementioned challenges by enabling remote, Over-the-Air (OTA) provisioning, eliminating the need to physical switch out a SIM card when changing to a different carrier network or different cellular network (2G, 3G, LTE, etc). eSIM is available in all form factors to meet the unique needs of each device. This enables IoT solution designers to build devices that best meet customer-centric needs, versus working around a particular SIM size and shape, or specific carrier network requirements.
Perhaps the most exciting application of eSIM technology is in IoT devices. eSIM is already in the beginning phases of being deployed with early adopters in the connected cars and industrial IoT industries. Among the many business benefits, eSIM technologies will reduce significant complexities for global IoT deployments where organisations traditionally relied on stocking, procuring, training, and managing various SIM card SKUs for each of the regions in which they operate.
The benefits of eSIM for IoT include:
The Road Ahead
Although some major cellular carriers are bringing eSIM solutions to market, their value is restricted to each carrier’s specific capabilities as they relate to coverage area, technology compatibility (i.e. 2G, 3G, LTE, etc.), and other value-added services. This limits these single-carrier offerings from adequately addressing the business challenges that eSIM technologies are designed to alleviate.
When selecting an eSIM partner, look for the following capabilities:
While there are still technical challenges ahead on the path to ubiquitous eSIM usage, the promise of simplified deployments that can support evolving network technologies or complex logistical deployments are exciting. eSIM solutions will mitigate the operational risks of unforeseen network sunsets or technology changes while minimising total cost of ownership over the lifetime of customers’ “things” – maximising return on their IoT investments.
For more information on eSIM, visit the KORE eSIM offering page or sign up for the KORE eSIM Starter Kit.