AT&T puts Connected Spaces on AWS Marketplace
- January 28, 2026
- Steve Rogerson

AT&T’s Connected Spaces has become its first end-to-end IoT offering listed on the AWS Marketplace, marking a milestone in simplifying smart business operations for SMEs.
Connected Spaces is a plug-and-play IoT offering to help businesses monitor and manage their environments in near real time. It combines pre-integrated wireless sensors and a secure cloud platform with intuitive dashboards to deliver actionable insights without requiring in-house IT expertise. Businesses can track critical metrics such as temperature, humidity, motion, energy usage and security, enabling them to optimise resources, reduce downtime and enhance customer experiences.
By joining AWS Marketplace (aws.com), AT&T is making it easier for businesses to discover, purchase and deploy Connected Spaces through a trusted cloud commerce platform. This listing streamlines procurement, accelerates time-to-value and provides a scalable, data-driven option that can support a wide range of industries such as retail, hospitality, healthcare, warehousing and property management.
“Connected Spaces is about giving businesses the tools to make smarter decisions, faster,” said Mike Van Horn, associate vice president at AT&T (about.att.com).
Connected Spaces (attconnectedspaces.com) offers a range of features to simplify IoT adoption. Businesses benefit from easy installation with pre-staged sensors and dashboards, near real-time monitoring of environmental conditions, and customisable alerts when thresholds are exceeded. It is built for scalability, allowing organisations to add sensors as their needs evolve, and offers extended range and long battery life for reliable performance. Data are encrypted end to end.
“With Connected Spaces, we replaced assumption with facts,” said Tom Reichert, dean of the College of Information & Communications at the University of South Carolina (sc.edu). “We gained clear insights on the usage of our grad lounge using the people-counting sensor as well as real-time alerts from the temperature sensors that helped prevent overheating our network closets.”








