Telecom and pay TV providers are entering a period where traditional connectivity revenue is growing at well under 2 percent a year worldwide, even as traffic volumes, quality expectations, and competitive pressures continue to rise.
This widening gap between flat service revenues and escalating investment needs is the central strategic challenge now confronting network operators, tech vendors, and investors across the communications value chain.
This transitional environment forces service providers to pivot from "grow by adding lines" to "grow by monetizing experiences, insights, and ecosystems."
Enterprise digital transformation, 5G, fiber, and cloud computing are all necessary enablers, but none of them automatically translate into higher ARPU or margin; they need to be coupled with new value propositions and operating models.
Telecom and Cable Market Development
According to the latest IDC market study, worldwide spending on telecom and pay TV services is expected to reach approximately $1.53 trillion in 2025, with annual growth running below 2 percent over the forecast period.
Even modest top-line expansion at this scale masks substantial regional differences, with some emerging markets still posting mid-single-digit growth while many developed markets hover near stagnation.
This modest revenue trajectory contrasts sharply with operators’ capital and operating demands: fiber rollouts, 5G standalone deployments, and cloud network modernization all require sustained multi‑year investment, often outpacing revenue growth.
The result is sustained pressure on EBITDA margins, spurring a wave of cost-transformation programs, tower and asset carve-outs, and network‑sharing arrangements aimed at freeing up capital for revenue growth bets.
Sources of New Digital Growth Revenue
With traditional consumer voice and data communication services nearing saturation, the interesting upside is increasingly in adjacent or overlay services rather than pure connectivity.
- Converged bundles: Fixed–mobile convergence and multiplay offers that blend broadband, mobile, and pay TV into a single experience, with incremental revenue coming from premium content, gaming, and smart home add‑ons.
- Enterprise solutions: Secure connectivity, SD‑WAN/SASE, private 5G, and managed cloud services for midmarket and large enterprises, where telcos can move up the stack from pipe to partner.
- Platform plays: Telco APIs (e.g., quality‑on‑demand, location, identity), exposure of network capabilities, and ecosystem marketplaces that let partners build and monetize new services on top of operator infrastructure.
In this context, the relatively small but fast‑growing slices of revenue from B2B digital services, edge computing, and IoT can have an outsized impact on valuation, even if they remain small in the total revenue mix over the forecast horizon.
Strategic Themes Shaping the Global Market
Several structural themes emerge from IDC’s broader telecom and digital infrastructure research that help explain and contextualize the slow overall growth outlook.
- Value shift to digital services: As AI, cloud, and software‑defined networking become central, a greater share of the value pool moves to platforms and applications layered on top of connectivity, often captured by hyperscalers and specialist SaaS players.
- Intensifying competition and regulation: In many markets, aggressive price competition and regulatory pressure to keep retail tariffs low constrain ARPU growth, even where demand for data rises sharply.
- Operational efficiency as a growth enabler: AI‑enabled network operations, automation of back‑office processes, and cloud‑native architectures are no longer optional cost-saving levers; they are prerequisites for funding innovation and improving time‑to‑market.
For network operators, this means that strategic differentiation increasingly comes from customer experience, ecosystem partnerships, and vertical industry expertise rather than raw network coverage alone.
Outlook for Digital Revenue Apps Growth
The most compelling growth opportunities sit at the intersection of advanced communication networks, Applied-AI initiatives, and industry‑specific value creation applications.
As enterprises adopt more distributed, cloud‑centric architectures, they will demand connectivity that is programmable, secure, and tightly integrated with application performance, enabling offerings such as Network‑as‑a‑Service and integrated compute solutions at the edge.
"The regional dynamics remain mixed, with inflationary effects, competition, and Average Revenue per User (ARPU) trends playing a central role in shaping market trajectories,” says Kresimir Alic, research director at IDC.
That being said, I believe continued consolidation, infrastructure sharing, and partnerships with cloud hyperscalers will reshape industry structure, rewarding market leaders that can simultaneously get leaner at the core and more inventive at the edge of their business models.
