Leveraging 5G to Provide Friction-Free CX

New Network Technology Delivers Greater Performance, but Also Raises the Bar on Customer Expectations

[the_ad_placement id="news-telecom-top"]
5G wireless customer experience

Industry trade group GSMA estimates that by the year 2025, the number of 5G connections will reach 2 billion, up from 1 billion in 2022. Moreover, by the end of 2025, 5G will account for over one-fifth of total mobile connections, and more than two in five people globally will live within reach of a 5G network. And although 5G promises to deliver enhanced reliability, performance, and efficiency for both consumers and Internet of Things (IoT) devices, this new technological capability also will raise the bar for customer expectations.

Indeed, there have been concerns raised about the security and privacy of personal data with both 4G and 5G networks, as well as the potential security risks involved with the use of open APIs. While this architecture makes 5G networks even more useful across a wide range of potential applications, it also can make them more vulnerable to hackers. Forward-looking operators must address network reliability and security as new immersive applications, such as augmented reality (AR) and virtual reality (VR), big data, and cloud computing become ubiquitous.

5G networks are designed to deliver high data rates, but perhaps more importantly, extremely low-latency connections that allow reliable and resilient, near real-time data services to be rolled out across the network. That is why operators need to focus on the elements of the use cases of tomorrow to ensure friction-free, customer-centric experiences.

The following aspects of 5G service must be considered by operators that are rolling out 5G services.

Growing consumer expectations

In a sense, customers have become spoiled by technology itself; they expect that their internet service and the applications that run on the networks should work 100% of the time, irrespective of other factors, including network congestion, the device they are using, or the complexity of the application they are running.

It will be up to operators to develop strategies for educating consumers on the potential limitations of the devices and/or applications that are running on the network, as well as the limitations of the network itself. Operators may be punished, in terms of brand or service reputation, if a customer experiences issues with an application or service, even if the problem is not network-related. By clearly establishing the limitations of 5G technology upfront, a fairer baseline of expectations of the operator and its services can be established.

Use of video support

One of the primary benefits of 5G technology is the network’s enhanced capacity for data-intensive support tools, such as mobile video.  Live video support can often be used to provide more efficient and personalized customer service, which is often a critical component of overall CX. Via 5G-enabled video, CX reps will be able to troubleshoot highly technical challenges through screen-sharing and video chat, potentially reducing the number of product returns or in-person technical support visits. This should result in a more personalized experience during support interactions, as well as expedited customer support times.

Self-service troubleshooting

Similarly, the increased bandwidth and lower latency of 5G networks should also allow a greater amount of self-service and in-home troubleshooting of devices. In some cases, a device could independently detect an issue or need for maintenance, and alert its user before the device experiences an issue. For example, a sensor in a set-top box could automatically send data from a diagnostic routine that runs periodically, thereby allowing the telecom company to schedule and send a service person before the customer experiences an outage. Such proactive service activities can often increase overall CX by addressing and eliminating problems before they occur.

AR/VR capabilities

The high speed and low latency of 5G likely will support the migration of processing power to the cloud, which could support the greater and more widespread use of VR/AR technology. The combination of high speed and minimal lag is perfect for both VR and AR, as it allows for lifelike digital experiences that do not suffer any dropouts, which can mar the effectiveness or aesthetics of a particular experience.

These two technologies may spur greater utilization of virtual stores, as well as the use of AR to “try out” products virtually (such as allowing a customer to see if a desired smartphone will fit on a wireless charger located within a vehicle, for example).

The key for operators is to ensure that these technologies are properly tested and retested so that when they are rolled out to customers, they are free of glitches and are optimized with the consumer in mind. The experience needs to be friction-free and intuitive to not only attract attention, but ensure that the end goal (customer satisfaction) can be achieved smoothly and efficiently.

Author Information

Keith Kirkpatrick is VP & Research Director, Enterprise Software & Digital Workflows for The Futurum Group. Keith has over 25 years of experience in research, marketing, and consulting-based fields.

He has authored in-depth reports and market forecast studies covering artificial intelligence, biometrics, data analytics, robotics, high performance computing, and quantum computing, with a specific focus on the use of these technologies within large enterprise organizations and SMBs. He has also established strong working relationships with the international technology vendor community and is a frequent speaker at industry conferences and events.

In his career as a financial and technology journalist he has written for national and trade publications, including BusinessWeek, CNBC.com, Investment Dealers’ Digest, The Red Herring, The Communications of the ACM, and Mobile Computing & Communications, among others.

He is a member of the Association of Independent Information Professionals (AIIP).

Keith holds dual Bachelor of Arts degrees in Magazine Journalism and Sociology from Syracuse University.

SHARE:

Latest Insights:

Oracle Makes the Case for AI Inside Everyday Leadership Workflows
July 2, 2026

Oracle Makes the Case for AI Inside Everyday Leadership Workflows

Keith Kirkpatrick, Research Director at The Futurum Group, examines how Oracle Manager Edge embeds AI-powered coaching into Oracle Cloud HCM, bringing real-time guidance into managers' daily workflows and strengthening Oracle's...
Domino Data Lab From MLOps Platform to Governed AI Application Factory
July 2, 2026

Domino Data Lab: From MLOps Platform to Governed AI Application Factory

Nick Patience, VP and Practice Lead, AI Platforms at Futurum, examines Domino Data Lab's pivot to governed AI application delivery, its agentic AI governance framework, and what the strategy means...
Siemens and IFS Announce Alliance to Advance Industrial AI
July 2, 2026

Siemens and IFS Announce Alliance to Advance Industrial AI

Siemens and IFS have partnered to advance Industrial AI solutions, merging Siemens' industrial automation depth with IFS's AI-embedded ERP platform. The alliance targets asset-intensive industries as enterprise software demand accelerates....

Latest Research:

The Enterprise Imperative for Digital Sovereignty Architecture, Control, and Competitive Advantage
June 17, 2026

The Enterprise Imperative for Digital Sovereignty: Architecture, Control, and Competitive Advantage

In our latest Market Brief, The Enterprise Imperative for Digital Sovereignty: Architecture, Control, and Competitive Advantage, completed in partnership with IBM, Futurum Research explores why AI is changing the sovereignty...
Data Gravity in the Age of AI Engineering the Mission-Critical Engine for Autonomous Workloads
June 11, 2026

Data Gravity in the Age of AI: Engineering the Mission-Critical Engine for Autonomous Workloads

In our latest report, Data Gravity in the Age of AI: Engineering the Mission-Critical Engine for Autonomous Workloads, completed in partnership with Oracle, Futurum Research explores why fragmented data architectures...
The Autonomous IT Imperative
June 2, 2026

The Autonomous IT Imperative

In our latest Market Report, The Autonomous IT Imperative, completed in partnership with Tanium, Futurum Research examines why traditional IT operations and security models are reaching their limits—and how Autonomous...

Book a Demo

Welcome

The vision behind everything in Futurum’s Custom Research practice is this: research should show you what is happening, what comes next, and what to do about it. It should be personal to each audience, easy for people to grasp, and structured so LLMs can reason over it accurately. And it should be fast and turnkey; you want answers now, not another project to carry for quarters.

Whether you are defining business, channel, or go-to-market strategy; evaluating vendors or justifying ROI; or commissioning research to fill an emerging market need, we have your back, with a program that answers your questions with the objectivity and credibility to drive real decisions.

To do it, we bring unmatched data to bear: Futurum research, surveys, and market projections; validated market feeds; ETR’s 15 years of insight from 10,000 technology decision-makers; G2’s buyer and user data; and what our analysts hear every day. Add leading primary collection, from AI-moderated voice interviews to surveys and analyst-led interviews, all turnkey, and every project comes out credible, nuanced, and actionable.

And we don’t just drop the results in your lap. For internal work, we provide analyst-led sessions, interactive dashboards, and a range of formats. For market-facing work, Futurum delivers turnkey activation and amplification that actually gets seen, by people and by LLMs, through our media and share of voice. This is research that moves decisions and markets.

We will meet you wherever you are, from a fast-turn brief to a multi-year program, and shape the work to your goals, timeline, and budget. The right program for your moment.

If any of this is useful, I would love to talk.

Benjamin Brown, VP Custom Research, Futurum Research

Benjamin Brown

VP, Custom Research · The Futurum Group

Newsletter Sign-up Form

Get important insights straight to your inbox, receive first looks at eBooks, exclusive event invitations, custom content, and more. We promise not to spam you or sell your name to anyone. You can always unsubscribe at any time.

All fields are required






Thank you, we received your request, a member of our team will be in contact with you.