Ericsson (ERIC) is betting that the future of 5G isn't just about faster downloads—it's about turning network capabilities into products that developers and enterprises will actually pay for. The Swedish telecom giant announced a strategic partnership with LotusFlare that includes taking a minority stake in the company, all aimed at helping carriers monetize advanced network functions through application programming interfaces.
Think of it this way: carriers have built expensive 5G networks with all sorts of fancy features around performance and security, but they've struggled to charge extra for them. APIs could change that by giving developers direct access to premium network capabilities they can build into their applications. It's the industry's big hope for new revenue streams as traditional connectivity income gets squeezed.
The two companies plan to roll out integration blueprints that map common deployment scenarios for an API exposure layer covering access controls and customer consent. The idea is to help carriers move faster from technical rollout to actual revenue generation. Financial terms of Ericsson's investment weren't disclosed.
LotusFlare brings its DNO Cloud platform to the table, which handles the consent management and digital commerce infrastructure carriers need to expose network capabilities through APIs. Pairing that with Ericsson's network equipment creates what the companies hope will be a smoother path for carriers to launch these new services.
Niklas Heuveldop, CEO of Vonage and senior vice president leading Ericsson's global communications platform business, said combining Ericsson networks with LotusFlare's network abstraction and ecosystem partners could help carriers "unlock new network capabilities."
The move fits into a broader push across the telecom industry. Carriers and suppliers are hunting for growth opportunities as the old model of selling basic connectivity faces increasing pressure. Network APIs offer a way to monetize the premium features tied to 5G and emerging AI-driven applications—capabilities that developers and enterprises might actually be willing to pay extra for.
Ericsson has been working multiple angles on next-generation infrastructure. The company has collaborated with industry partners on separate initiatives to validate dual-mode 5G core technology as operators work to modernize their networks.
ERIC stock was down 0.10% at $9.61 during premarket trading on Wednesday.