Knowledge Hub / Essa Haidar

CXO Spotlight

Essa Haidar
Chief Technology Officer
Ooredoo

CXO Spotlight

Intelligent Networks, Intelligent Enterprises: Leading in the Age of AI Native Infrastructure

The digital economy is entering a decisive new phase — one where competitiveness is no longer determined by connectivity alone, but by intelligence built directly into infrastructure. Around the world, executive leaders are shifting from traditional transformation programs to a more ambitious mandate: creating enterprises that can sense, decide, and act in real time. This next frontier is defined by two powerful forces converging at scale: next‑generation networks and applied AI woven throughout the enterprise fabric.

 

The Network Becomes Intelligent: The 5G‑Advanced Era

 

Over the past decade, global operators made extraordinary strides advancing mobile broadband. Now, the leap to 5G‑Advanced (5G‑A) and 5G Standalone (5G SA) marks the most consequential shift since LTE. More than 180 operators are on track to deploy these capabilities by 2025, a signal that the industry has reached an inflection point.

 

5G‑A brings an immediate 20–30% improvement in network efficiency, delivering higher capacity and better user experience. Meanwhile, 5G SA — built on a fully cloud‑native architecture — achieves single‑digit millisecond latency, making real‑time industrial control, robotics, and immersive experiences commercially viable. Cloud‑native cores reduce energy per bit by 30–50%, drive faster innovation cycles, and streamline lifecycle management.

 

But the true transformation lies in the Service‑Based Architecture (SBA) underpinning 5G SA. This architecture is inherently programmable, enabling networks to behave less like infrastructure and more like intelligent digital systems.

 

Two capabilities exemplify this shift:

 

NWDAF — From Transport Layer to Decision Engine

 

The Network Data Analytics Function (NWDAF) infuses machine‑learning‑based analytics directly into the 5G core. It continuously monitors behavior, predicts mobility and traffic patterns, allocates resources intelligently, and automates policy decisions. In effect, NWDAF turns the network into an AI‑powered decision engine, capable of self‑optimization and real‑time experience assurance.

 

NEF — Exposing Intelligence to the Ecosystem

 

The Network Exposure Function (NEF) opens network capabilities securely to developers and enterprises. Through standardized APIs, organizations gain access to quality‑on‑demand, slicing control, real‑time analytics, location data, and event triggers that enable new industry applications. NEF transforms the network from a connectivity provider into a platform for ecosystem innovation.

 

Together, NWDAF and NEF redefine what a network can be — moving operators beyond bandwidth economics into the era of intelligent digital services.

 

AI at Scale: The Enterprise’s New Growth Engine

 

If 5G SA represents the digital nervous system, AI is the intelligence that activates it. Across industries, CEOs and technology leaders are now centering their strategies on three AI‑driven impact pillars:

 

1. Operational Efficiency That Moves the P&L

 

AI‑driven automation is delivering returns once considered aspirational: up to 35% OPEX reduction through predictive maintenance and automated configuration, over 20% improvement in capacity planning accuracy, and 30–50% fewer outages thanks to proactive anomaly detection and root‑cause acceleration. Efficiency is no longer a cost‑cutting exercise — it is a catalyst for reinvestment and growth.

 

2. Customer Experience Orchestrated, Not Managed

 

AI agents resolve 60–70% of engagement scenarios, enabling human experts to focus on complex needs. Predictive detection prevents issues before they reach the customer, cutting complaints by 25–40%. Personalized digital journeys deliver 15–25% conversion gains. Enterprises are evolving from reactive service models to proactive, end‑to‑end experience orchestration.

 

3. New Revenue Through Intelligent Network Services

 

Dynamic slicing, edge computing, and AI‑driven charging are expected to generate USD 130–150 billion globally by 2030. Industry‑specific applications — especially in logistics, manufacturing, and healthcare — now rely on real‑time network intelligence. With NEF‑enabled API monetization, operators are emerging as strategic enablers of national and sector‑wide digital transformation.

 

Advanced Compute: Accelerating AI for Every Enterprise

 

To unlock these capabilities, enterprises are modernizing their compute environments. Demand for GPU‑accelerated infrastructure is growing at 30%+ CAGR, driven by large‑scale training, inference, and real‑time analytics. Smart datacenters equipped with NVIDIA‑class GPUs deliver 3–10× faster training, secure AI experimentation, and high‑density efficiency. GPU‑as‑a‑Service models further democratize access, removing CAPEX barriers and speeding adoption.

 

The Path Forward: Building the AI‑Native Enterprise

 

The convergence of next generation networks, AI at scale, and GPU‑accelerated compute signals the dawn of the AI‑native enterprise. For leaders, the mandate is clear: build intelligent networks, activate enterprise‑wide AI, and transform infrastructure into a platform for innovation and growth.

 

Those who do will define the next era of digital leadership.