Monday, July 13, 2026

AI monetization for operators: separating revenue from cost avoidance

Every operator earnings call now features AI prominently. Listen closely, however, and most of what is described as "AI monetization" is nothing of the sort. It is cost avoidance cosplaying a revenue costume.

This distinction matters because the two require different investment logic, different organizational capabilities, and different patience horizons. Operators that blur them will misallocate capital. Operators that separate them have a chance at building genuine new B2B revenue lines — narrower than the hype suggests, but investable.

Three money flows, not one

AI touches operator economics through three distinct channels, and the discipline starts with refusing to aggregate them.

1. AI that reduces cost. Autonomous network operations, agentic customer care, energy optimization, predictive maintenance. This is real, it is happening, and it is the largest near-term financial impact of AI on operators. It is also not revenue. A dollar of opex avoided is valuable, but it does not create a new line of business, and it does not justify the "operators as AI companies" narrative. It justifies a leaner operator.

2. AI that defends existing revenue. Enterprises deploying AI workloads have new connectivity requirements: deterministic performance, low latency to inference endpoints, secure private connectivity to GPU capacity, data-gravity-aware networking. Operators that serve these requirements protect and modestly grow their core B2B connectivity business. This is differentiated connectivity for the AI era — important, defensible, but fundamentally an evolution of what operators already sell.

3. AI that creates new revenue. This is the category everyone wants to talk about and the one that deserves the most scrutiny. It exists, but it is narrower than most strategy decks admit.

The four credible new revenue lines

Having spent the last two years working on AI infrastructure with operators and vendors on both sides of the Atlantic, I see four B2B revenue opportunities that survive contact with commercial reality. They are not equal — they differ in demand maturity, margin profile and time horizon, and they should be funded accordingly.

Sovereign AI capacity — GPU-as-a-service and AI factories — is the most immediate and the most misunderstood. Demand is real and policy-driven, concentrated in regulated sectors; the margin profile is low-to-mid, because the business is capex-heavy and carries utilization risk; and the revenue is available now. The demand side is genuine: governments, healthcare systems, defense, financial services and public administrations in Europe increasingly cannot — or will not — run inference on US hyperscaler infrastructure under foreign jurisdiction. Operators hold assets that map remarkably well to this demand: national data center footprints, energy contracts, security clearances, sovereign trust, and enterprise sales relationships.

Telefónica's recent national rollout of edge-based GPU-as-a-service in Spain is instructive. The underlying edge platform was architected years earlier — I led the team that built and productized it — and for years the business case was marginal on enterprise use cases alone. What changed was not the technology. It was the arrival of sovereign AI demand, which finally gave the infrastructure a paying anchor tenant profile. The lesson generalizes: edge and distributed compute investments become fundable when sovereignty is the demand driver, not the garnish.

The caution: this is a capex-intensive, utilization-sensitive business competing against hyperscalers with structurally lower unit costs. Operators win where sovereignty, data residency and proximity are binding constraints — and lose everywhere else. The addressable market is the regulated slice of national demand, not "the AI market."

Edge inference is real but earlier than its promoters claim. Demand exists where latency or data gravity bind; margins are mid-range; and the horizon is two to five years before this becomes a broad product line. The use cases that pay today are those where physics or data gravity make centralized inference impossible: industrial vision, real-time media production, autonomous operations in ports and factories. I have seen these work commercially. But the buyer set is narrow, and each engagement still resembles a system integration project more than a product sale. This becomes a scalable product line when agentic AI workloads distribute themselves across infrastructure tiers — the architecture I have described elsewhere as the AI Grid. That shift is underway, not arrived.

Data and trust services are the sleeper. Deepfake detection on voice calls, branded and verified calling, identity assurance for AI agents, provenance services. These are small revenue lines today, but they are high-margin, they monetize immediately, they sit directly on operator trust assets that hyperscalers cannot replicate, and demand grows with every AI-enabled fraud headline. For a B2B operator, this category has the best margin-to-capex ratio of the four.

Network APIs are the line whose trajectory has changed most in the past two years. The strategic logic has always been sound — AI agents will need to programmatically request network resources, quality on demand, location, verification — and the commercial signals are finally following: revenues are growing, aggregation initiatives have consolidated distribution, and enterprise visibility is rising with every agentic deployment that needs verified identity or guaranteed quality. It remains the earliest-stage of the four, and the AI agent wave — rather than developer evangelism — is what gives it genuine demand pull. I would invest now to be positioned, while sizing near-term revenue expectations with discipline; the inflection is likely in the second half of the decade.

The monetization ladder

Across all four lines, there is a ladder that determines margin and defensibility:

Sell capacity → sell platform → sell outcomes. Capacity here includes every consumption-metered unit: GPU hours, tokens, gigabits.

Selling raw capacity — GPU hours, token-metered inference, connectivity — is rung one: necessary, low-margin, commoditizing from day one. Tokens deserve a specific caution here: metering in tokens rather than GPU-hours changes the billing unit, not the business. An operator selling tokens against someone else's models and someone else's stack is still selling capacity, at prices that will be set by the most efficient infrastructure provider in the market. Selling a platform — inference-as-a-service with orchestration, security, compliance tooling — is rung two, where margins improve and switching costs appear. Selling outcomes — a fraud-detection rate, a production workflow, a compliant AI deployment for a hospital group — is rung three, where the economics finally resemble a services business worth building.

Operators historically stall at rung one. The reasons are organizational, not technological: product management that thinks in network elements rather than buyer problems, sales forces compensated on connectivity, and business cases that demand payback before the platform layer has time to mature. The operators that climb the ladder will be those that treat AI monetization as a product management and go-to-market transformation, not an infrastructure deployment.

What the buyer actually pays for

A final discipline. In every commercially successful case I have worked on, the enterprise buyer was not paying for "AI." They were paying for a constraint to be removed: data that could not leave the country, latency that broke the use case, a fraud pattern that was costing millions, a compliance requirement that blocked deployment. Price the constraint, not the technology. The moment an operator's AI proposition cannot name the constraint it removes, it is a science project.

Three questions before approving any operator AI business case

  1. Which of the three money flows is this — cost, defense, or new revenue? If the answer mixes them, send it back.
  2. What binding constraint does the buyer pay to remove, and why is an operator structurally better placed to remove it than a hyperscaler or an integrator? Sovereignty, proximity and trust are acceptable answers. "We have a network" is not.
  3. Where does this sit on the capacity–platform–outcome ladder, and what is the credible path up? Rung-one economics with rung-three ambitions is where operator AI investments go to die.

The AI B2B opportunity for operators is real. It is also smaller, slower and more demanding of commercial discipline than the current narrative suggests. The winners will not be the operators with the most GPUs. They will be the ones that can tell the difference between a cost saving, a defended revenue and a new business — and fund each accordingly.

Thursday, July 9, 2026

Operators Lean In On AI Grid Location


Earlier this week I argued that the AI Grid debate needs to move on from where you place a GPU to whether geographically dispersed compute can behave as a single fabric. I stand by that. But a story that has been building across the press this week is a useful reminder that the location question, the one I have been answering the same way for two years, is now being settled in public by the people who actually own the radio networks. And they are settling it against the tower.

The reporting is consistent. Light Reading describes Nokia and Nvidia's AI-RAN proposition running into telco resistance. Verizon, Vodafone, Orange and, notably for me, Telus have all raised doubts about putting graphics processing units into the radio access network. AT&T's chief technology officer has cast public doubt on the case for AI compute at the far edge. The enthusiasm for GPU-in-the-RAN comes from two operators, T-Mobile US and SoftBank, and almost no one else. Much of the rest of the industry is looking at Intel's newer CPUs for its open RAN rollouts rather than filling cell sites with accelerators.

I want to be precise about what this does and does not prove. It does not prove that AI in the RAN is a bad idea. Applying machine learning to scheduling, link adaptation and energy management inside the baseband is real, it is shipping, and Ericsson's AI-in-RAN software subscription is a reasonable way to bring it into existing hardware. What the operators are rejecting is narrower and more specific. They are rejecting the proposition that the cell site should become a general-purpose AI inference venue, stuffed with GPUs, monetised by hosting third-party workloads at the edge of the network. That is the proposition I have said for two years does not survive contact with power, cooling, space, security and, above all, the absence of a monetisation model.

My position has been that AI Grid deployment begins at the central office and the mobile switching office, not the cell site, because every physical and commercial constraint favours the aggregation point over the tower. The reasoning was never controversial to anyone who has stood in both kinds of building. A central office has power feeds, environmental control, physical security and fibre already in place. A cell site has a cabinet, a limited power budget and a landlord. When Verizon, Vodafone, Orange and Telus decline to put GPUs at the far edge, they are not making a new argument. They are confirming an old one, and they are confirming it with capital allocation decisions rather than conference slides, which is the only confirmation that counts.

There is a workstream reason this caught my eye. Telus appearing on the skeptics' list is consistent with what I see in the market: operators that are serious about autonomous operations are also the ones being disciplined about where AI compute physically lands. Those two forms of discipline are related. An operator that thinks clearly about the economics of edge inference tends to think clearly about the economics of everything else in the network.

The AI-RAN enthusiasm gap also matters for how we read vendor claims. When a technology has two vocal operator champions and a longer list of vocal operator skeptics, that is the signature of a capability that has been field-validated in specific conditions but not commercially validated across the market. I have made this distinction before and it applies cleanly here. SoftBank's agentic AI-RAN demonstrations and T-Mobile's Nvidia-backed edge trials are real engineering. They are not yet evidence that the model generalises to operators with different cost structures, different energy prices and different enterprise demand. Treat a two-operator enthusiasm as a pilot signal, not a market verdict.

So where does this leave the fabric argument I made last week? Exactly where I left it, and stronger. The operators are removing the least defensible node from the AI Grid, the cell site as inference host, which clears the ground for the argument that actually matters. Once you accept that heavy inference will not live at the tower, the interesting question becomes how you knit central offices, regional data centres and a small number of genuinely latency-bound edge sites into one addressable pool. The industry spent this week deciding where the compute will not go. That is progress. The harder decision, who owns the fabric that arbitrates across the places it will go, is still open, though.