Member Insights
Jesse Lynch, Telco Industry Specialist at Ocient looks at the new era of telecom, powered by real-time data, AI and analytics, and how CSPs must modernize infrastructure to improve service, optimize networks and unlock new revenue streams
Telecom’s next wave of innovation: are you ready?
The smartphone changed everything. Nearly 20 years later, telecom is facing another major shift — one shaped not just by more data, but by how quickly and intelligently that data can be used.
Last year, U.S. wireless data usage jumped 36 percent, the largest single-year increase on record. Americans used over 100 trillion megabytes of mobile data, sent more than 2 trillion texts, and logged more than 2 trillion minutes of voice calls. CSPs aren’t just running networks anymore. They’re managing massive volumes of data, and the growth isn’t slowing down.
Despite that, many providers are still relying on legacy infrastructure that can’t keep up. The most forward-thinking CSPs are moving beyond reactive operations. They’re turning to real-time, compute-heavy analytics to improve service, unlock new revenue streams, and lead the next phase of innovation. Here's how:
Customer expectations are higher than ever. One bad experience — a dropped call or buffering video — can lead to churn. Today, CSPs can use metadata like call records, connection quality, internet speeds, and contact center logs to identify and resolve problems before customers notice.
Paired with qualitative data from mobile apps, chats, and searches, these insights let CSPs offer proactive support. AI and machine learning help detect patterns and trigger instant fixes. That kind of responsiveness builds trust and turns a potential complaint into a moment of delight.
Modern networks are complex. Multiple spectrum bands, new technologies, and third-party hardware make planning difficult and expensive. That’s where high-performance analytics comes in.
CSPs can now integrate data from across the network — CDRs, 5G traffic, bandwidth availability, backhaul metrics, even real estate and competitor data — into one real-time view. This visibility allows for smarter investments and data-driven forecasts to prepare for future demand.
The goal isn’t just to fix problems faster. It’s to avoid them altogether.
Your network data holds more than performance metrics. It contains a deep pool of behavioral insights. With the right privacy controls in place, CSPs can connect usage patterns to customer preferences and tailor services accordingly.
Whether it’s recommending a data plan, promoting content bundles, or delivering more relevant messaging, personalized experiences can drive loyalty and increase revenue per user. Done right, this kind of engagement feels helpful, not intrusive.
CSP data is valuable far beyond the telecom space. Smart cities, advertisers, retailers, and researchers are all looking for geospatial and behavioral insights that only telcos can provide.
CSPs are starting to safely and ethically package anonymized data for third-party use. That could mean location analytics for retailers, audience segments for ad targeting, or network data to support public infrastructure planning. The result is a set of new, scalable revenue streams with long-term potential.
To make these use cases real, CSPs need more than dashboards. They need purpose-built infrastructure designed for high-volume, high-speed, always-on workloads. That means:
This same infrastructure can also support growing compliance and lawful disclosure demands, offering fast, secure data retrieval without running separate systems.
The telecom industry is moving fast. The CSPs that lead this next wave won’t just manage data — they’ll use it to transform the way they do business.