Developing timely, convenient, and low-cost methods for high-frequency characterization of soil nutrients is necessary for implementing precise soil nutrient management. With the current availability of numerous calibration models of laboratory benchtop near-infrared (NIR) spectrometers for rapid soil nutrient characterization and the appearance of low-cost, convenient miniaturized NIR spectrometers, this study proposes an efficient deployment strategy to address model failure due to inter-device variation based on spectral transfer. The strategy involves using Direct Standardization (DS) to migrate the spectra from multiple miniaturized NIR spectrometers with a laboratory benchtop NIR spectrometer and then directly applying the existing calibration models of the laboratory benchtop instrument to the transferred spectra for soil nutrient analysis. The results indicated that the DS method successfully transferred the spectra of miniaturized devices to be consistent with the spectra of the laboratory benchtop instrument. The soil organic matter (SOM) predictions using the transferred spectra and the calibration models of the laboratory benchtop instrument were even more accurate than those using the respective models developed for each miniaturized devices, with root mean square error (RMSE) of 0.177 %, 0.177 %, and 0.150 %, respectively, while the performances of total nitrogen (TN) predictions were comparable to those using the respective models, with RMSE of 0.013 %, 0.012 %, and 0.010 %, respectively. Bland-Altman plots demonstrated good consistency between the strategy proposed in this study and the strategy of developing respective models for each miniaturized device, with no difference in predictions for the independent validation set compared to the laboratory benchtop instrument. This study proved the feasibility of deployment strategy of multiple miniaturized NIR spectrometers based on spectral transfer, offering a new solution for high-frequency on-site soil nutrient characterization.