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Strategic Centering 2026: How CEOs Build Growth When the Rules No Longer Apply

Strategic Centering 2026: How CEOs Build Growth When the Rules No Longer Apply

Strategic Centering 2026: How CEOs Build Growth When the Rules No Longer Apply

TL;DR / Executive Summary

The old playbook for corporate strategy is no longer fit for purpose and the data from the world's leading research institutions in 2026 makes that case with unusual force. Columbia Business School professor Rita McGrath, writing in Harvard Business Review, argues that traditional frameworks built around competitive positioning cannot keep pace with an economy where value has shifted from physical assets to data, software, and human capability. The consensus response, layering AI onto existing structures and calling it transformation, is precisely what McKinsey's State of Organizations 2026, drawing on more than 10,000 senior leaders across 15 countries, identifies as the dominant failure mode. CEOs who want to grow in this environment need a different starting point: a single, coherent organizing principle that aligns capital allocation, talent, and innovation around one clear identity rather than a fragmented portfolio of bets.

  • 86% of leaders surveyed by McKinsey say their organizations are not prepared to embed AI into day-to-day operations, yet 88% report active deployment, that gap is destroying value, not creating it.
  • Organizations that intentionally redesign human-AI interactions are 2.5x more likely to report superior financial results, according to Deloitte's 2026 Global Human Capital Trends, yet only 6% of leaders say they are actually doing it.
  • BCG's 19th Annual Most Innovative Companies Study found that top innovators outperformed the broader market by 2.4 percentage points annually over 20 years, with the gap widening most sharply during economic downturns.

1. The Context

The competitive environment that most strategy frameworks were designed for, with stable industry boundaries, predictable profit pools, and measurable cost advantages, has effectively dissolved. Rita McGrath's HBR article, "The Power of Strategic Centering," due in the July-August 2026 issue, argues that in a dematerializing economy where intangibles like data, software, and organizational capability now account for the majority of enterprise value, companies can no longer win by positioning within an industry structure. Industries themselves are dissolving, and the question is no longer "where do we stand in the value chain?" but "what are we fundamentally about, and how does everything we do reinforce that answer?" That is a harder question than it sounds, and most leadership teams are not yet asking it seriously.

Three forces are making this challenge operationally urgent. McKinsey's State of Organizations 2026, covering 10,000 senior executives across 16 industries, identifies them precisely: the acceleration of AI and automation; intensifying economic and geopolitical fragmentation; and the fundamental transformation of workforce expectations. McKinsey's own framing has shifted to reflect this reality: change is no longer episodic but has become a permanent condition and the new baseline for operating. The organization that expects a return to stability after the next disruption cycle is building strategy on a false premise. 72% of leaders told McKinsey that geopolitical uncertainty has already had a notable impact on their operations, while two-thirds say their organizations are overly complex and inefficient as a cumulative result of responding to past crises without a coherent center.

The resolution that is emerging from the research is not the one most boards are currently funding. More AI vendors, another transformation program, or another reorganization is not the answer. Deloitte's 2026 Global Human Capital Trends research, conducted with Oxford Economics across 9,000 business leaders in 89 countries, identifies the decisive structural shift: organizations that redesign work around genuine human-AI collaboration, rather than mere AI adoption, are twice as likely to exceed their return-on-investment expectations for technology. The bottleneck, as Deloitte puts it, is the failure to design the human layer around AI, a gap the research labels cultural debt. 65% of organizations believe their culture needs to change significantly because of AI, and 34% say their culture is currently blocking their AI transformation goals. That is not a technology budget problem; it is a strategic coherence problem.

2. The Evidence

The numbers behind this argument are not marginal. BCG's 19th Annual Most Innovative Companies Study, covering 20 years of data, found that top innovators outperformed the MSCI World Index by 2.4 percentage points per year on average, with the performance gap widening most dramatically during the Great Recession and the COVID-19 pandemic. The implication for boards is direct: innovation capability is not a discretionary expenditure to cut when times are difficult, but rather the mechanism by which companies protect and extend their valuation advantage precisely when competition retreats. Despite this evidence, the share of executives who describe their own companies as innovation leaders fell by 24 percentage points between 2021 and 2024. BCG found no consistent link between raw R&D spend and total shareholder return. What the outperformers share is disciplined focus on where to compete and that is strategic centering operating under a different label.

The organizational data reinforces the same conclusion from a different angle. McKinsey's State of Organizations 2026 found that 88% of organizations report active AI deployment, yet fewer than 20% of those who attempted implementation saw a meaningful financial impact. The gap between deployment and value creation is a strategic coherence problem, not a technology one. When there is no clear center, AI gets deployed to whatever problem is most politically visible rather than whatever problem most directly drives value. Deloitte's research adds a second finding: 88% of employees report using AI at work, but only 5% use it in ways that meaningfully transform how work gets done, and 60% of executives use AI in decision-making while only 5% say they manage its effects well. The adoption rate and the governance rate are not in the same zip code, and that gap is where cultural debt accumulates.

MetricValueSource
Leaders who say their organization is unprepared to adopt AI in day-to-day operations 86% McKinsey State of Organizations 2026
Leaders who recognize the importance of human-AI interaction design versus those actually leading it 66% recognize it; only 6% are leading it Deloitte Global Human Capital Trends 2026
Annual outperformance of top BCG innovators vs. MSCI World Index (20-year average) +2.4 percentage points per year BCG Most Innovative Companies Study 2025
Organizations more likely to exceed AI ROI expectations when they prioritize human-AI work redesign 2x more likely Deloitte Global Human Capital Trends 2026
Organizations where AI deployment produced meaningful financial results Fewer than 20% of those that deployed McKinsey State of Organizations 2026
Organizations that say their culture is actively blocking AI transformation goals 34% Deloitte Global Human Capital Trends 2026
Leaders reporting geopolitical uncertainty has had a notable operational impact 72% McKinsey State of Organizations 2026
Business leaders whose primary competitive strategy is to be fast and nimble over the next three years 70% Deloitte Global Human Capital Trends 2026

3. MD-Konsult Research View

Consensus position: McKinsey, BCG, and Deloitte agree that the combination of AI acceleration, geopolitical fragmentation, and workforce transformation demands faster organizational adaptation, more agile operating models, and greater AI investment. BCG's CEO Agenda frames this explicitly as a growth imperative, with 72% of CEOs now personally leading their company's AI strategy, a significant escalation in ownership since 2024.

MD-Konsult position: Speed without a center is not agility; it is expensive drift, and the evidence shows that most organizations are already experiencing it at scale.

McKinsey's own data makes this hard to argue against, as 88% of companies are deploying AI, yet fewer than one in five are seeing meaningful financial returns. Deloitte documents that 88% of employees report using AI at work, but only 5% use it in ways that transform how work actually gets done. That gap is structural, not technological: organizations moved fast without building the trust, governance, and role clarity that make human-AI collaboration durable. Forbes and Deloitte call this "cultural debt," defined as the invisible liability that accumulates when AI adoption outpaces the organizational design needed to sustain it. Meanwhile, McGrath's strategic centering framework, which ask the question before any decision is made: what are we, and what will we always be, regardless of what technology or geopolitics does next?", provides the missing structural answer: companies that commit to a clear center gain the internal coherence to decide what to automate, what to protect, and what to stop doing entirely. The three real-world cases below show what that looks like in practice, and the results are not hypothetical.

Being early to this position has asymmetric value, because the companies that build strategic coherence now, before the next AI capability wave and before the next geopolitical shock, will not just manage disruption better; they will use disruption as a growth catalyst, moving decisively while competitors are still deciding where to focus. BCG's 20-year innovation data is unambiguous: the performance gap between focused innovators and the broader market is largest during crises, not during stable periods. The time to establish that center is before the next wave arrives, not after.

Strategic Centering 2026: How CEOs Build Growth When the Rules No Longer Apply

4. Three Real-World Cases That Prove the Point

Case 1: Fujifilm — From Film to a JPY 3 Trillion Healthcare Powerhouse

When digital photography destroyed Fujifilm's core business in the mid-2000s, the same shift effectively ended Kodak. Fujifilm's survival was not luck; it was the result of a deliberate strategic center built on a systematic audit of the transferable technologies the company had developed during its decades in film manufacturing. These included precision coating, collagen chemistry, anti-oxidation compounds, and imaging optics, and Fujifilm made a disciplined decision to compete only in markets where those capabilities created genuine advantage.

The results are empirically documented. Fujifilm committed $11 billion across a three-year strategic plan to make healthcare its largest segment, applying X-ray film expertise to medical imaging and collagen chemistry to skincare products. By its fiscal third quarter of 2025, Fujifilm posted record quarterly revenue and profits, with the Healthcare segment reaching JPY 266.1 billion for the quarter, up 7.7% year over year, and Bio CDMO revenues surging 18% following the launch of new manufacturing facilities in Denmark. Annual revenue now exceeds JPY 3.0 trillion, and healthcare has become the company's primary growth engine. The center was imaging technology and materials science, not cameras or film, and that distinction is what allowed the company to survive and ultimately thrive.

Case 2: Novartis — Pruning the Portfolio to Accelerate the Core

In 2022, Novartis CEO Vas Narasimhan made a decision that many observers questioned at the time: spinning off Sandoz, the company's generics and biosimilars division, to create what he described as "a more focused innovative medicines company." That Sandoz had produced $2.3 billion in net sales in a single quarter only sharpens the point: exiting a profitable business to concentrate on a narrower identity is a textbook strategic centering move, and the financial record since then makes the case plainly.

After the spin-off completed in 2023, Novartis upgraded its mid-term sales guidance twice. By November 2024, the company upgraded its mid-term sales guidance to a 6% CAGR from 2023 to 2028, up from the prior 5% target, driven by eight in-market brands with peak sales potential of $3 billion to $8 billion each. Priority brands including Kisqali (+55% constant currency in Q1 2026), Scemblix (+79% cc), and Leqvio (+69% cc) are growing at rates that would have been diluted under a broader portfolio structure. Full-year 2026 guidance was reaffirmed in April 2026, with a core operating income margin of 37.3%. The Sandoz spin-off was not a divestiture of a failing asset; it was a declaration of strategic center.

Case 3: Toss — Centering on Frictionless Finance to Reach 60% of a Country

Toss, the South Korean fintech founded in 2014 by former dentist Lee Seung-gun, built everything around a single organizing principle: make financial transactions so frictionless that the experience itself becomes the competitive advantage. While incumbent Korean banks competed on product breadth, Toss competed on eliminating friction at every point of contact, and that center informed every product decision, from peer-to-peer transfers to banking, securities, insurance, and payments infrastructure.

The business results bear this out. In Q2 2025, Toss surpassed KRW 668 billion (USD 493 million) in consolidated quarterly revenue, a 41% year-over-year increase. By July 2025, Toss surpassed 30 million registered users, reaching approximately 60% of the South Korean population, with enrollment rates of 95% among people in their 20s and 87% among people in their 30s. The company reported $1.4 billion in full-year 2024 revenue, a 43% year-over-year jump, and is preparing a US IPO at a target valuation of over $10 billion, potentially reaching $15 billion. The center was never financial products; it was the removal of friction, and that distinction is what scaled.

5. Practitioner Perspective

"What we have learned from working with leadership teams across multiple sectors is that the organizations struggling most with AI are not the ones with the worst technology — they are the ones with the most ambiguous identity. When there is no agreed answer to the question of what the organization is fundamentally here to do, every AI investment becomes a political negotiation rather than a strategic choice. Strategic centering is not a branding exercise. It is the governance infrastructure that makes execution possible. Once you have a clear center, the AI deployment decisions, the talent decisions, and the portfolio decisions all become dramatically easier to make and defend to the board."

-- Chief Strategy Officer, Global Industrial Conglomerate (Fortune 500)

This view is grounded in patterns that Deloitte's 2026 Global Human Capital Trends research quantifies: organizations that lead on intentional human-AI interaction design are 2.5 times more likely to report superior financial results and twice as likely to say they provide meaningful work for their people. The organizations that are succeeding are not faster AI adopters; they are clearer about what they are asking AI to support, and that clarity comes from strategic identity, not from a technology strategy.

6. Strategic Implications by Stakeholder

StakeholderWhat to Do NowRisk to Manage
CTO / CIO Audit every active AI initiative against the organization's stated strategic center. Pause or kill anything that cannot be directly mapped to that identity, and redirect freed budget toward intentional human-AI workflow redesign rather than more infrastructure. As the Fujifilm and Toss cases demonstrate, the technology advantage comes from applying existing capability to a clear purpose, not from owning more technology. Cultural debt accumulates silently: 65% of organizations already say their culture needs to change significantly because of AI, and 34% say culture is actively blocking their transformation goals. If the workforce does not trust or understand AI's role in their work, adoption will stall regardless of spend, which means trust frameworks and accountability structures need to be built alongside every deployment, not added as an afterthought.
COO / Operations Redefine productivity metrics around outcomes that reflect the strategic center, not just efficiency ratios. Two-thirds of leaders already describe their organizations as overly complex, and nearly 40% say redefining process flows is the biggest productivity unlock over the next one to two years, according to McKinsey. Simplify workflows before automating them — the sequence matters significantly. Adding AI to broken processes accelerates failure rather than improvement. The Toss model is instructive here: frictionless outcomes required eliminating steps, not automating them. Treat geopolitical fragmentation as a permanent operating constraint, and embed scenario planning into the quarterly operating rhythm rather than treating it as a crisis management tool activated only during acute disruptions.
CFO / Board Require every major capital allocation decision, including AI investment, to pass a strategic centering test: does this reinforce what we are fundamentally about, or does it dilute our identity? The Novartis Sandoz spin-off is the clearest recent example of a board willing to exit a profitable business to concentrate the capital and leadership attention that a clear center requires. BCG's 20-year innovation data consistently links disciplined focus, not R&D spend volume, to superior shareholder returns. The board's most significant near-term risk is approving a large AI program without a clear answer to McGrath's foundational question: what is our strategic center? Without that answer, the program will produce activity but not competitive advantage. Deloitte's research shows that 56% of leaders design AI implementations solely around business outcomes like cost and speed, with no accounting for human outcomes like trust, fairness, or skills development — and that imbalance has a measurable financial consequence over time.

7. What the Critics Get Wrong

The most serious challenge to the strategic centering argument comes from portfolio diversification advocates who argue that in a volatile, multi-polar world, committing to a single organizing principle creates dangerous concentration risk. BCG itself, in its CEO Growth Agenda, acknowledges that diversified innovation portfolios and continuous M&A capability are essential tools for navigating uncertainty. The argument has real merit: companies with diversified revenue streams often redirect resources faster during crises, and if a single center becomes brittle when the environment shifts sharply, the prescription may be worse than the disease it addresses.

That critique confuses strategic coherence with strategic rigidity, however. McGrath's framework is explicit: a center is not a fixed product or a segment definition; it is a dimension of competition along which a company pursues coherent opportunity sets as markets evolve. Fujifilm's center in imaging technology and materials science survived the complete destruction of the film industry and allowed the company to generate record revenue in healthcare, semiconductors, and life sciences without losing strategic identity. Deloitte's 2026 research shows that 70% of leaders identify speed and nimbleness as their primary competitive strategy over the next three years, and clarity of center is precisely what makes that speed possible rather than what prevents it. The organizations that pivot fastest are not the most diversified ones; they are the ones that know precisely what they are preserving while everything else changes.

8. Frequently Asked Questions

What is strategic centering, and how is it different from a mission statement?

Strategic centering, as defined by Columbia Business School's Rita McGrath in her July-August 2026 HBR article, is an organizing principle that guides resource allocation, opportunity selection, and organizational identity simultaneously. A mission statement tells stakeholders what the company believes, whereas a strategic center tells the leadership team what to fund, what to kill, and what to stop doing entirely. The difference is operational: companies with a clear center make faster, more consistent decisions because every significant choice can be tested against the same criterion, and the Novartis case demonstrates this precisely — the decision to spin off Sandoz was defensible not because the business was failing, but because it did not fit the center.

Why are so many AI investments failing to deliver financial returns in 2026?

McKinsey's State of Organizations 2026 found that while 88% of organizations report active AI deployment, fewer than 20% have seen meaningful financial impact. The core reason is strategic incoherence rather than technology failure. When organizations lack a clear center, AI gets applied to politically visible problems rather than the ones that actually drive value. Deloitte's research confirms the second layer: 88% of employees use AI at work, but only 5% use it in ways that materially change how work is done, which means the bottleneck is the failure to design the human layer around AI, not the failure to acquire the technology itself.

How do CEOs drive growth through innovation during periods of uncertainty?

The answer from BCG's CEO Agenda 2026 is counterintuitive but supported by two decades of data: the best time to invest in innovation capability is during periods of volatility, because that is when competitors retreat and market position becomes acquirable at lower cost. BCG's study found that the most innovative companies widened their performance advantage over the market most sharply during the Great Recession and the COVID-19 pandemic, not during growth cycles. The practical implication is that executives who treat innovation as a governed growth system with clear accountability and cadence will consistently outperform those who treat it as a portfolio of individual bets that gets suspended when boards get cautious.

What are the three tectonic forces McKinsey identifies, and why do they matter together?

McKinsey's State of Organizations 2026 identifies AI and technology acceleration, economic and geopolitical fragmentation, and the transformation of workforce expectations as three mutually reinforcing forces rather than independent challenges. They matter together because the organizational response to each force, whether faster AI deployment, supply chain restructuring, or new talent models, can undermine the other two if they are not coordinated from a common strategic center. McKinsey's nine organizational shifts are designed as an integrated response, not a sequential checklist, and organizations that address them as such are four times more likely to sustain top-tier financial performance over the following decade.

What does "human times machine" mean in practice, and how do organizations build it?

Deloitte's 2026 Global Human Capital Trends defines the shift from human-plus-machine (additive) to human-times-machine (multiplicative) as the central value creation challenge of the decade. In practice, that shift means replacing the question "what can AI automate?" with "how does AI amplify what humans do best?" This reframing drives fundamentally different design choices, because rather than substituting a human task with an algorithm, organizations redesign the entire workflow so that people use AI to think faster, see further, and decide more reliably, while retaining the judgment and accountability that machines cannot replicate. Deloitte's research shows that organizations making this shift are 2.5 times more likely to report superior financial performance, and building it requires explicit investment in workflow redesign, trust infrastructure, and governance — not just AI licensing.

How does strategic centering apply to M&A and portfolio decisions?

Strategic centering provides the most practical filter available for M&A and portfolio decisions. When a company has a defined center, the question of whether an acquisition reinforces that identity becomes answerable, and the discipline to decline deals that dilute the center becomes defensible to shareholders. BCG's 2026 CEO research notes that the strongest performers treat M&A as a continuous capability rather than a periodic event, and that capability only functions sustainably when there is a clear center to integrate toward. Without that center, serial acquisitions generate the organizational complexity that McKinsey documents as one of the primary destroyers of long-term performance, given that two-thirds of leaders already describe their organizations as overly complex.

9. Related MD-Konsult Reading

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Autonomous Telecom Networks 2026: The Strategic Decision That Defines the Next Decade

Autonomous Telecom Networks 2026: The Strategic Decision That Defines the Next Decade

Autonomous Telecom Networks 2026: The Strategic Decision That Defines the Next Decade

TL;DR / Executive Summary

Autonomous telecom networks are a fundamental business model transformation that rewires how operators create, deliver, and capture value. A network that self-configures, self-heals, self-optimizes, and translates business intent directly into network behavior is not a better version of what exists today. It is a different kind of business: one where connectivity becomes programmable, where SLAs can be guaranteed to millisecond precision, and where services that were previously unscalable become commercially viable at any volume. The operators who understand this distinction are already building towards Level 4 autonomous networks with a product roadmap as their guide. Those treating it as a cost-reduction technology programme will arrive years late, with the wrong architecture, and without the revenue model to justify what they built. The global autonomous networks market is forecast to grow from USD 8.53 billion in 2025 to USD 37.9 billion by 2033, and 90 percent of telcos already report AI is increasing revenue and reducing costs, with autonomous networks ranked the top ROI use case in the industry.

  • Autonomous telecom networks are a prerequisite for the telco-to-AICO transition: operators who achieve them will move intelligence, not just bits, across their infrastructure, opening a new identity and revenue model for the first time in twenty years.
  • What must be true to achieve them is specific and demanding: clean unified data, cloud-native OSS, cross-domain AI agents, intent-based orchestration, and a governance model that ties every automation decision to a named business outcome.
  • The competitive clock cannot be paused: Telefonica now operates 12 Level 4 use cases in production, China Mobile has eliminated manual fault resolution across its IP network, and Vodafone has reported over 500 million euros in combined savings. Every quarter of delay widens the AI model experience gap and the talent gap simultaneously.
Autonomous Telecom Networks 2026: The Strategic Decision That Defines the Next Decade

1. The Real Nature of Autonomous Telecom Networks

Most organizations describe autonomous telecom networks as networks that automate themselves and that framing is technically accurate and strategically misleading. Automation is a feature, while autonomy is a business model and the distinction matters enormously for how capital is committed, how architecture is designed, and what outcomes are measured.

An autonomous telecom network operates across four dimensions simultaneously. 

  1. It self-configures: the network designs and deploys its own optimal configuration in response to changing demand, spectrum conditions, and service objectives without human instruction. 
  2. It self-heals: faults are detected, diagnosed, and resolved through closed-loop AI decision-making before service degradation reaches a customer. 
  3. It self-optimizes: the network continuously adjusts resource allocation, routing, and energy consumption to maintain performance against stated goals. 
  4. And, critically, it is intent-driven: a network decision-maker or enterprise customer states a desired outcome, a performance target, an SLA requirement, a quality of service threshold, and the network figures out how to fulfil it, continuously, across all domains from the radio access layer to the core and service layer simultaneously. 
 Ericsson's canonical definition of autonomous networks describes systems built on three pillars: agentic closed-loop automation, intent-driven interactivity and interoperability, and intelligent data management. Remove any one of these pillars and you have a more efficient version of what operators run today, not an autonomous telecom network.

The TM Forum Autonomous Network Framework provides the maturity model the industry uses to measure progress: six levels from Level 0, which is fully manual, to Level 5, which is fully self-evolving. Level 3 is conditional autonomy, meaning the network manages itself within predefined rules but requires human approval for anything outside them. Level 4 is highly autonomous, meaning the network acts on intent without human intervention across complex, multi-domain scenarios including those not explicitly anticipated during configuration. 

The financial difference between Level 3 and Level 4 is not marginal. Level 3 delivers perhaps half of the available OPEX savings, and none of the revenue-side value. As analysts observing MWC 2026 noted: automation reduces effort, but autonomy aligns outcomes. That is where business model transformation begins.

The broader strategic frame being adopted by the most forward-looking operators is the concept of AICO: AI infrastructure company. Sebastian Barros of Circles, whose views were cited in the NVIDIA 2026 telecom AI survey, describes the transition directly: telcos will shift from moving bits across networks toward moving intelligence across local and regulated infrastructure. The customers will not just be humans, rather they will be AI models, humanoid robots, autonomous machines, and hyperscalers (HCP). Every one of them requires low-latency, guaranteed-SLA, programmable connectivity to function. An autonomous telecom network is the infrastructure layer that makes that commercially viable at scale. A traditionally managed network is not.

2. What Must Be True to Achieve Autonomous Telecom Networks

The most important strategic question for any organization considering ATN investment is not which vendor to choose or which use case to start with. It is: what conditions must exist inside our organization before autonomous networks can deliver at Level 4? This question is almost never asked with sufficient rigor, and its absence explains the majority of program failures in the field today.

TierOne's CTO, presenting at MWC 2026, was direct: autonomy is not a software switch, it's an architectural evolution. Real autonomous networks require five specific conditions to be true simultaneously. 

  1. First, clean and actively reconciled inventory data: the network cannot make autonomous decisions about resources it cannot accurately see. 
  2. Second, cross-domain end-to-end service visibility: AI agents operating in siloed domains cannot coordinate the multi-layer responses that Level 4 autonomy requires. 
  3. Third, real-time service impact intelligence: the system must be able to evaluate the customer-facing consequence of any network event within milliseconds, not hours. 
  4. Fourth, closed-loop AI-augmented orchestration: the feedback between observation, decision, and action must be continuous and machine-driven, not batch-processed and human-approved. 
  5. Fifth, measurable operational KPIs linked to business outcomes, not technical metrics: without this link, autonomy remains a technology ambition disconnected from the profit and loss account.
 Without all five, what organizations build is sophisticated automation that stalls at Level 3. Detecon's autonomous networks transformation framework identifies six organizational pillars that must be built in parallel, not sequentially. Business value and use case prioritization must come first: every initiative must begin with a defined business problem and a quantifiable KPI, not a technology specification. Process digitalization must remove manual workflows entirely, not layer automation on top of them. Analytics, AI, and data management must be treated as infrastructure in their own right: DataOps pipelines, ML model governance, and real-time data availability are as critical as the AI models themselves. Cloud-native architecture with standardised APIs must replace monolithic OSS systems: microservices-based architectures are the only substrate on which cross-domain autonomous decision-making can operate at the required speed and scale. People, skills, and organization must be transformed: autonomous networks require cross-functional teams combining network engineering, data science, software development, and AI operations expertise in a single accountability structure. And governance must enforce accountability at every level, from individual AI agent decisions to board-level value reporting. The operators who are succeeding at Level 4 have all six pillars in motion simultaneously. Those who treat any one as optional will stall.

The data infrastructure requirement deserves particular focus because it is the most common underinvestment point. Google Cloud's autonomous networks architecture presented with Deutsche Telekom and Vodafone at MWC 2026 identified the critical bottleneck explicitly: one of the biggest hurdles to achieving Level 4 to 5 autonomy is manual delays caused by disconnected legacy systems. The solution implemented was a unified graph data layer that breaks down silos between operational and analytical data, enabling real-time updates and deep historical pattern detection without slow ETL processes. Symphonica's white paper on intent-driven autonomous networks is equally direct: legacy OSS architectures are not just suboptimal for autonomous networks, they actively block them. Monolithic OSS lack the modularity required for autonomous operations, and fragmented data prevents AI models from operating with the reliability Level 4 demands. OSS modernization is not a prerequisite that can be deferred until after the ATN program is underway. It is part of the ATN program itself, and it must be funded and staffed accordingly from day one.

3. The Evidence: Financial Performance and Market Momentum

The financial case for autonomous telecom networks has moved past modelling. The Capgemini Research Institute surveyed operators globally and found that before most had reached Level 3, they had already documented a 20 percent improvement in operational efficiency and an 18 percent reduction in network OPEX. The study benchmarks average investment of approximately 87 million USD over five years against projected OPEX savings of 150 to 300 million USD, delivering an ROI of 1.7x at the conservative end and 3.4x under optimistic deployment conditions, with payback periods of 1.5 to 2.9 years. Vodafone's autonomous network program has delivered over 500 million euros in combined CAPEX and OPEX savings, a figure that elevates ATN from a technology cost-optimization discussion to a balance-sheet strategic decision. Bharti Airtel has reported a 30 to 50 percent reduction in mean time to repair and a 20 to 25 percent reduction in operational costs through autonomous AI-driven network and service operations, according to Forbes analysis of the 2026 telecom AI shift.

The operator cohort that has committed most fully to ATN is already seeing the separation effects. Telefonica closed 2025 with 12 fully operational Level 4 use cases across Spain, Brazil, and Germany, including autonomous capacity creation, digital twin-driven transport network optimization, and intelligent multi-domain correlation for 4G and 5G simultaneously. The operator targets an average autonomy level of 3.75 across its entire network by 2028 and full Level 4 by 2030. China Mobile achieved an 80 percent reduction in major network faults after elevating its network operations centre from Level 3.2 to Level 4 using AI agents for fault management and customer complaint resolution. Telstra achieved 30 percent faster time to market and 20 percent OPEX reduction in 5G network slicing through autonomous domain deployments. These are production outcomes verified through the TM Forum assessment framework, not projected results from a pilot program. The proof-of-concept phase for autonomous telecom networks is over.

Metric Value Source
Global autonomous networks market (2025 to 2033) USD 8.53B in 2025; forecast USD 37.9B by 2033 at 20.8% CAGR Grand View Research, 2026
Autonomous telecom networks market (2026 to 2031) USD 11.38B in 2026; USD 28.53B by 2031 at 20.18% CAGR Mordor Intelligence, May 2026
ANT ROI per operator (Capgemini) 1.7x to 3.4x return; payback 1.5 to 2.9 years on approx. USD 87M investment Capgemini Research Institute, 2024
Vodafone: combined CAPEX and OPEX savings Over 500 million euros 5G Americas, 2025
Bharti Airtel: MTTR and OPEX reduction 30 to 50% reduction in MTTR; 20 to 25% operational cost reduction Forbes, February 2026
Telefonica: Level 4 production use cases 12 fully operational Level 4 use cases as of end-2025; targeting Level 4 network-wide by 2030 Telefonica, February 2026
China Mobile: network fault reduction at Level 4 80% reduction in major network faults; NOC elevated from Level 3.2 to Level 4 STL Partners, December 2025
Telstra: 5G network slicing outcomes 20% OPEX reduction; 30% faster time to market TM Forum Inform, April 2026
Telcos reporting positive AI impact on revenue and costs (2026) 90%; autonomous networks ranked top AI ROI use case by 50% of respondents NVIDIA AI in Telecom Survey, February 2026
Telcos planning AI budget increase in 2026 89%, up from 65% in 2025 NVIDIA AI in Telecom Survey, February 2026

4. MD-Konsult Research View

Consensus position: The dominant framing in the market, most explicitly stated in the Bain and Company/TM Forum Autonomous Networks Reality Check published in August 2025, defines ATN value primarily through the lens of OPEX reduction. The report benchmarks success against a 30 percent cost savings target by 2028 and recommends operators begin with operational use cases like fault management and service assurance before engaging revenue-generating domains. This is sensible sequencing advice. It is not a sufficient strategic frame.

MD-Konsult position: The operators who will define competitive advantage through 2030 are not building autonomous networks to spend less. They are building them to sell something fundamentally new: programmable, intent-based, guaranteed-SLA connectivity as a service, at any scale, to any type of connected entity. The OPEX savings are the financial case that gets the program funded. The revenue transformation is the strategic case that determines whether the program was worth building at all.

Two data points validate this contrarian position. First, TM Forum Inform's April 2026 analysis of NaaS strategy states explicitly that NaaS represents a transformation of business models rather than solely a technological advancement, and that it is the mechanism through which 5G monetization becomes commercially viable at scale. Operators who design their ATN architecture around fault management as the primary use case will arrive at Level 4 without the intent-driven service orchestration layer that NaaS requires. The architecture that delivers 30 percent OPEX savings and the architecture that enables programmable NaaS are not identical. Choosing one without planning for the other is a multi-year capital allocation error. Second, SDxCentral's analysis of the NVIDIA 2026 telecom survey cites the survey director directly: 80 percent of operators expect AI-native networks before 6G, the industry is in a full investment and adoption phase, and the question of quantifying ROI is a thing of the past. The operators leading this shift are not asking whether ATN is worth building. They are asking what their network must be capable of to compete in a market where intelligence, not bandwidth, is the scarce and valuable resource.

The strategic advantage of being early on the full-value architecture path compounds through time in a way that is not quickly reversible. AI agents that manage autonomous networks improve through operational experience. That experience takes the form of labelled training data, validated decision patterns, and calibrated confidence thresholds across thousands of real network events. It is not transferable between operators. An operator that begins building these AI systems in 2026 will be operating more capable, more reliable, and more commercially differentiated autonomous networks in 2029 than an operator who begins in 2028, because the early mover's agents have been learning from live traffic every day that the late mover spent evaluating vendor proposals.

5. Practitioner Perspective

"The hardest conversation we have with operator leadership teams is not about technology. It is about identity. Autonomous networks are not a better version of what you operate today. They are a different kind of business. The question is not whether your network can reach Level 4 autonomy. It is whether your organization can define a commercial product that only Level 4 autonomy makes possible, and then work backwards to build the architecture, the data foundation, the operating model, and the governance structure that product requires. Operators who start from the product question get there. Operators who start from the technology question arrive at Level 4 with no commercial home for what they built."
-- Director of Network Strategy Transformation, Global Systems Integrator

This framing is reinforced by findings from the Capgemini Research Institute, which found that only 17 percent of telcos have adopted a comprehensive ATN transformation strategy with well-defined goals and measurable timelines, and that only 15 percent have appointed a dedicated cross-functional leader for autonomous network transformation. These two factors, strategic comprehensiveness and dedicated ownership, are the highest-correlation organizational predictors of faster deployment timelines and higher realized ROI across the global operator sample. The Fast Mode's 2026 analysis of autonomous network trends describes five trends that will define the year: agentic AI transforming operations into business-aligned systems; modular observability replacing dashboard-based monitoring; autonomous assurance replacing reactive incident management; cross-domain AI coordination replacing siloed automation; and mature governance replacing experimental oversight controls. Each of these trends is a prerequisite condition for Level 4 in production, not a nice-to-have feature. Together they describe the operating environment that only organizations who have done the prerequisite work can sustain.

6. The Regulatory and Standards Landscape

The regulatory environment for autonomous telecom networks is converging on a set of requirements that make governance architecture, not just technical architecture, a determinant of program success. The most immediate constraint is the EU AI Act, fully applicable from August 2, 2026. Autonomous network systems that make decisions with material impact on service quality, infrastructure availability, or customer experience are likely to qualify as high-risk AI systems under Article 6 and Annex III of the Act. The practical obligations for Level 4 deployments include documented conformity assessments before deployment, human oversight mechanisms capable of intervening in or overriding AI decisions, transparency documentation covering data governance and model performance, and post-market monitoring for continuous compliance. US-headquartered operators with European network operations face the same compliance deadline regardless of corporate domicile. The Act's requirements are not in tension with ATN architecture. They define the governance architecture that trustworthy Level 4 systems require regardless of regulatory mandate: an AI agent whose decisions cannot be explained or overridden is not safe to operate in a production network.

Standards bodies are converging simultaneously on a common technical foundation that reduces deployment risk. The ETSI ISG ZSM group defines the cross-domain automation architecture and AI enabler specifications. The AI-RAN Alliance, now 132 members following MWC 2026, defines AI-native RAN architecture, bringing intelligence into the radio access layer as an inherent property rather than an operational overlay. The joint GSMA, ETSI, TM Forum, ITU, and IEEE GenAINet self-healing autonomous networks initiative launched in 2026 is producing AI model benchmarks and evaluation criteria that will likely become the regulatory technical baseline in multiple jurisdictions. For decision makers, the practical implication is clear: building to open standards is not a vendor management preference, it is a program risk management requirement. Proprietary architectures that cannot be assessed against ANLET, ZSM, or AI-RAN benchmarks will face regulatory and procurement scrutiny that slows deployment and increases compliance cost over the program's life.

7. Strategic Implications by Stakeholder

Stakeholder What to Do Now Risk to Manage
Strategy and Technology Leadership Begin not with a technology assessment but with a product question: what service can you offer at Level 4 that you cannot profitably offer today? Define that product first. Then use the TM Forum ANLET framework to identify the two or three domains where Level 4 capability is achievable within 18 months and where it directly enables the defined product. Appoint a dedicated ATN program leader with a mandate that spans network, IT, and commercial teams simultaneously. Evaluate the Ericsson and Nokia multivendor rApp cooperation and the Huawei AN L4 Phase 2 solution with the A2A-T agent protocol against open-standards compliance criteria before committing to either architecture. Starting from fault management as the anchor use case and building an architecture that reaches Level 4 in the NOC without the intent-driven orchestration layer that NaaS and programmable enterprise connectivity require. That is the most common and most expensive architectural mistake in the field today and it is not correctable without restarting major workstreams.
Operations and Delivery Leadership Treat legacy OSS decommissioning as a first-class ATN workstream, not a dependency to be resolved later. AI-driven, cloud-native, no-code OSS is not an incremental upgrade: it is the data substrate on which autonomous AI agents must operate. Without it, Level 4 AI models will produce unreliable decisions on incomplete data. Redesign NOC workflows around the closed-loop model China Mobile deployed. Reframe workforce transformation around AI-augmented engineering roles: organizations that lead with downsizing as the ATN narrative create cultural resistance that the Bain and TM Forum survey identifies as one of the top three deployment blockers across the global operator sample. Building automation on top of legacy infrastructure rather than replacing it. That approach produces Level 3 at best, at Level 4 cost, because AI models cannot achieve production reliability without clean, unified, real-time data across all domains simultaneously.
Finance and Board Leadership Require a five-year ATN investment case, not a two-year pilot justification. Use the Capgemini 87 million USD investment against 150 to 300 million USD in savings model as the floor case and the Vodafone 500 million euro outcome as the ceiling reference. Establish a cross-functional ATN governance committee with quarterly reporting against business outcome KPIs defined in the TM Forum AN Framework. Require every ATN use case approval to include a named commercial product or revenue line, not just an efficiency metric, before capital is committed. Ensure EU AI Act compliance budgets are included for any Level 4 deployment in EU-regulated markets ahead of the August 2, 2026 deadline. Under-scoping the investment because the case is framed only on OPEX, and arriving at a network that is more efficient but not more commercially differentiated. The operators who win the enterprise connectivity market through 2030 will be those who used the OPEX savings to fund the NaaS architecture. Those who stopped at the savings will have funded their competitors' advantage.

8. What the Critics Get Wrong

The skeptical position deserves serious engagement. The Bain and TM Forum reality check documents real and persistent barriers: multi-vendor interoperability gaps, the complexity of legacy OSS migration, structural AI talent shortages, and the absence of clean cross-domain data in most operator environments. Critics correctly argue that 84 percent of operators cannot reach Level 4 next year, that the organizational change required is genuinely difficult, and that Level 3 conditional autonomy may deliver 80 percent of available OPEX savings with materially lower integration risk. These are honest constraints. Any capital allocation framework that ignores them will produce overruns and missed timelines.

Where the skeptical position fails is in its assumption that the competitive clock pauses while operators deliberate. Industry analysts tracking agentic network operations in 2026 are unequivocal: early-mover operators are accumulating AI model training data, cross-domain decision experience, and engineering talent that creates advantages compounding with each quarter of operation. TM Forum's April 2026 progress report confirms that the pace of Level 4 production deployment is accelerating, not slowing, as the first cohort of operators demonstrates that the barriers Bain identified in 2025 are solvable with committed roadmaps. The data infrastructure problem is a sequencing challenge. Operators who begin OSS modernization and cross-domain data unification now will have the foundation required for production Level 4 by 2027 to 2028. Operators who defer that work will not be one year behind. They will be three or more, because the prerequisite program itself takes 18 to 24 months once the decision to commit has been made.

9. Frequently Asked Questions

Why are autonomous telecom networks described as a business model change rather than a technology change?

Because the product they make possible did not exist before, and cannot be manufactured with the previous architecture. A network that can provision a guaranteed-SLA enterprise slice in under two minutes, autonomously assure that SLA in real time, and expose its capabilities through open APIs is not a faster version of traditional connectivity. It is a different commercial offer entirely. TM Forum Inform's April 2026 analysis of NaaS strategy states this plainly: NaaS represents a transformation of business models, not solely a technological advancement. The technology is what makes the new model possible. The business model is why the technology is worth building.

What are the five conditions that must be true before Level 4 autonomy is achievable?

Based on TierOne's MWC 2026 analysis and the Detecon transformation framework, the five conditions are: clean and actively reconciled inventory data across all domains; cross-domain end-to-end service visibility with no data siloes between network layers; real-time service impact intelligence that connects network events to customer outcomes in milliseconds; closed-loop AI-augmented orchestration that acts without batch processing or human approval gates; and measurable operational KPIs linked directly to business outcomes, not technical metrics alone. If any one of these five is absent, autonomous AI agents will produce decisions that are either unreliable, unauditable, or commercially irrelevant, and the program will stall at Level 3 regardless of how much has been invested.

How long does it realistically take to reach Level 4 in a specific domain from Level 2?

Operators who commit cross-functional teams, address data infrastructure in parallel, and focus on a single high-value scenario can reach Level 4 in that domain within 18 to 24 months of program launch. China Mobile's deployment with Huawei is the clearest available benchmark: the operator moved from Level 3.2 to Level 4 in its network operations center with all IP software faults now resolved through closed-loop automation without human intervention. The prerequisite work, specifically OSS consolidation and cross-domain data unification, typically requires 6 to 12 months running in parallel. Operators who sequence OSS modernization before the ATN program rather than running both concurrently add 12 to 18 months to the total timeline without any acceleration benefit.

What is the relationship between autonomous telecom networks and 6G?

ATN at Level 4 is both a prerequisite for and an accelerant of 6G readiness. 80 percent of telecom operators in the NVIDIA 2026 survey expect AI-native networks to be deployed significantly before 6G, and the AI-native RAN architectures being built now under the AI-RAN Alliance framework will form the radio access foundation of 6G. Operators who achieve Level 4 autonomy before the 6G deployment cycle will have the AI infrastructure, the data assets, and the operating model already in place to integrate 6G capabilities as they become available. Those who have not will face two simultaneous transformations rather than one sequential one, compressing timelines and multiplying execution risk at the worst possible moment.

What does the EU AI Act require for Level 4 autonomous network deployments specifically?

Level 4 autonomous network systems operating in EU jurisdictions must be assessed against high-risk AI classification criteria under the EU AI Act, fully applicable from August 2, 2026. Systems that make consequential decisions about service availability or infrastructure configuration without human intervention are the archetype of high-risk AI under Annex III. Compliance requires documented conformity assessments before deployment, human oversight mechanisms capable of overriding AI decisions, transparency documentation covering training data governance and model performance records, and ongoing post-market monitoring. These requirements define the governance architecture that trustworthy Level 4 systems require regardless of regulatory mandate.

How should organizations structure the build versus buy decision for ATN components?

The decision is not binary and should not be treated as a single program-level choice. The data infrastructure layer, unified OSS, real-time inventory, and cross-domain telemetry pipelines, is where building internal capability matters most because it reflects each operator's specific network topology and cannot be standardized across operators without losing fidelity. The AI agent layer, covering fault management, capacity optimization, and intent-based orchestration, is where proven platforms add speed, with the Ericsson and Nokia multivendor ecosystem and Huawei AN L4 Phase 2 both offering production-grade components assessed against open standards. The governance and compliance layer must be built internally because no vendor can accept accountability for how an operator's AI agents perform against its specific regulatory obligations under the EU AI Act or equivalent jurisdiction-specific requirements.

10. Related MD-Konsult Reading

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Neuromorphic Computing 2026: From Research Prototype to Strategic Infrastructure Decision

Neuromorphic Computing 2026: From Research Prototype to Strategic Infrastructure Decision

Neuromorphic Computing 2026: From Research Prototype to Strategic Infrastructure Decision

Executive Summary

Neuromorphic computing, a class of hardware that integrates memory and processing within artificial neural circuits inspired by biological synaptic function, has reached a measurable inflection point supported by published benchmarks, peer-reviewed architecture results, and active sovereign investment. The International Energy Agency (IEA) projects that global data-center electricity consumption will more than double by 2030, rising from 415 TWh in 2024 to approximately 945 TWh, with AI-specific workloads driving roughly half of that incremental demand. Against that structural backdrop, IBM's NorthPole chip, described in a 2023 paper in Science, delivered 22 times lower inference latency and 25 times higher energy efficiency than contemporary GPU architectures on the ResNet-50 benchmark. Intel's Hala Point system at Sandia National Laboratories, built from 1,152 Loihi 2 processors, achieves 20 petaops of equivalent compute at 2,600 watts in a 12U chassis. These are not speculative projections; they are documented experimental results. The technology's commercial timeline, adoption constraints, and strategic significance are now sufficiently substantiated to warrant inclusion in institutional technology planning horizons for 2026 through 2030.

  • Published evidence base: Primary findings on neuromorphic performance now appear in Science, Nature, and Nature Communications, constituting a citable academic record sufficient for institutional analysis and policy documents.
  • Sovereign investment signal: The Netherlands launched a coordinated national neuromorphic roadmap in October 2025 under Topsector ICT, with a €30M investment programme formalised in April 2026, providing a replicable policy model for other jurisdictions.
  • Commercial readiness gap: Software toolchain immaturity and the absence of standardised benchmarks remain the primary adoption constraints, both of which are being addressed by active research programmes, including NeuroBench, published in Nature Communications in February 2025.

1. The Structural Problem Neuromorphic Computing Addresses

Global data-center electricity demand reached 415 terawatt-hours in 2024, representing approximately 1.5% of total world electricity consumption, according to the International Energy Agency's April 2025 Energy and AI report. The IEA projects that figure will reach 945 TWh by 2030 under its base-case scenario, a rate of growth that is four times faster than electricity demand in other sectors and broadly equivalent to Japan's current annual national consumption. AI-specific server infrastructure accounts for approximately 24% of server electricity demand today and is forecast to represent nearly half of total incremental data-center demand growth through 2030. The IEA further notes that electricity demand from data centers surged 17% in 2025 alone, five times faster than overall global electricity demand growth of 3%, while technology sector AI infrastructure investment exceeded $400 billion in the same year.

The underlying architectural constraint driving this energy intensity is the von Neumann bottleneck: in conventional processor designs, computation and memory storage occupy physically separate locations, requiring continuous high-bandwidth data transfer between them. This data movement constitutes the dominant energy cost in most inference workloads, not the arithmetic operations themselves. The 2024 Roadmap to Neuromorphic Computing with Emerging Technologies, a multi-institutional review coordinated by Adnan Mehonic and colleagues at University College London, identifies the memory-bandwidth wall as the structural limit that incremental improvements to GPU and TPU design cannot resolve, because both architectures inherit the fundamental separation of compute and storage from their von Neumann lineage. The roadmap maps the physical and algorithmic development pathways across device materials, circuit architecture, and system integration that would be required to address this constraint at scale.

Neuromorphic architectures address the von Neumann bottleneck at the hardware level by physically co-locating memory and computation within artificial neurons and synapses, then propagating information as asynchronous, event-driven spike signals rather than synchronous clock cycles. Because computation occurs only in response to an incoming signal rather than continuously, energy expenditure scales with the density of actual input events rather than with provisioned clock capacity. For the class of workloads characterised by sparse, real-time sensor data, this architectural property produces efficiency gains that are categorical rather than incremental. The January 2025 Nature paper "Neuromorphic computing at scale", co-authored by researchers from Sandia National Laboratories, Royal Holloway University of London, and multiple international partners, describes scalable neuromorphic architecture approaches and identifies the ecosystem conditions required for the technology to reach operational maturity across domains including defence, robotics, health monitoring, and edge inference.

2. Hardware Benchmarks: What the Published Evidence Shows

The most rigorously published neuromorphic performance results come from two sources: IBM's NorthPole chip, documented in a 2023 paper in Science authored by Dharmendra S. Modha and colleagues at IBM Research, and Intel's Hala Point system, deployed at Sandia National Laboratories in April 2024. These represent distinct architectural approaches and distinct points on the commercialisation curve, a distinction that matters for any institution attempting to map the technology against a specific deployment horizon.

NorthPole is a 12-nanometre digital chip comprising 256 computing cores, each containing on-chip memory, with 22 billion transistors across an 800 square-millimetre die. By eliminating off-chip memory access during inference, the Modha et al. paper reports that NorthPole achieves 22 times lower latency, 25 times higher energy efficiency (measured as frames per second per watt), and five times higher area efficiency (frames per second per transistor count) relative to comparable GPU architectures tested on the ResNet-50 image classification benchmark. Critically, NorthPole outperformed chips fabricated at smaller process nodes, including Nvidia's H100 with 80 billion transistors, on the energy efficiency metric. A Nature news piece reporting on the paper quoted Damien Querlioz, a nanoelectronics researcher at the University of Paris-Saclay, as calling the chip's energy efficiency "mind-blowing." The acknowledged limitation, stated explicitly in the paper, is that NorthPole cannot execute training workloads or large language models in its current configuration, a constraint the authors describe as an engineering problem addressable through multi-chip interconnect rather than a fundamental architectural ceiling.

Intel's Hala Point takes a different approach, implementing spiking neural network (SNN) computation across 1,152 second-generation Loihi 2 processors produced on Intel's 4-nanometre process. As documented in Next Platform's April 2024 analysis of the deployment, the system contains 1.15 billion neurons and 138 billion synapses, processes 380 trillion synaptic operations per second, and delivers an equivalent of 20 petaops of sparse deep neural network computation at a sustained power draw of 2,600 watts, fitting within 12U of a standard 42U rack. For sparse workloads at 8-bit resolution, the system achieves 15 teraops per watt, a figure Intel's newsroom benchmarks against Nvidia's Blackwell GB200 at 6 TOPS/W and the H100 at 3.1 TOPS/W. Sandia is using the Whetstone toolchain to convert convolutional neural networks developed for conventional GPU infrastructure to spiking neural networks executable on Hala Point, which is relevant to assessments of transition cost for organizations with existing model libraries.

A third line of published evidence comes from a May 2024 Nature Communications paper reporting on a fabricated asynchronous neuromorphic chip achieving 0.7 milliwatts power consumption with high-accuracy sensor processing, demonstrating that the efficiency gains are reproducible across research groups and chip architectures rather than unique to a single vendor. The convergence of results across IBM, Intel, and independent academic fabrications provides the evidentiary foundation that distinguishes this generation of neuromorphic hardware from earlier demonstrations that did not survive replication at system scale.

Metric or Data PointValuePrimary Source
Global data-center electricity demand, 2024 415 TWh (approx. 1.5% of global consumption) IEA Energy and AI Report, reported in Nature, Apr 2025
Projected global data-center electricity demand, 2030 945 TWh (base case); AI-linked demand to triple 2024–2030 IEA Energy and AI Report, reported in Nature, Apr 2025
IBM NorthPole inference performance vs. comparable GPU 22x lower latency; 25x higher energy efficiency (FPS/W); 5x higher area efficiency on ResNet-50 Modha et al., Science, Oct 2023 (DOI: 10.1126/science.adh1174)
Intel Hala Point system configuration 1.15 billion neurons; 138.2 billion synapses; 2,600W peak draw; 12U chassis; 1,152 Loihi 2 chips Intel Newsroom / Sandia National Laboratories, Apr 2024
Intel Hala Point energy efficiency (sparse 8-bit inference) 15 TOPS/W vs. Nvidia H100 at 3.1 TOPS/W and GB200 at 6 TOPS/W Next Platform, Apr 2024 (citing Intel deployment data)
NeuroBench: standardised benchmark framework for neuromorphic Multi-institution framework; hardware-independent and hardware-dependent tracks; Nature Communications Vol. 16, article 1545, 2025 NeuroBench Consortium, Nature Communications, Feb 2025
Netherlands national neuromorphic investment programme €30M total; €9M NWO grant; 7 demonstrators across energy, telecom, defence, medical technology, and semiconductors; 10–30 year roadmap horizon TU Eindhoven / NWO, Apr 2026
Neuromorphic computing market forecast $3.56B (2026) to $14.92B (2032); 26.5% CAGR ResearchAndMarkets Global Forecast, 2025

3. MD-Konsult Research View

The dominant institutional framing of neuromorphic computing, present in Gartner hype cycle positioning and in most semiconductor equity research, treats software ecosystem immaturity as the primary adoption constraint and draws the conclusion that the technology remains three to seven years from consequential enterprise deployment. That framing is partially accurate on the software question but draws the wrong strategic conclusion from it. The Nature Communications paper on commercialisation pathways, published in April 2025 by Schuman, Plank, and colleagues, identifies two specific obstacles that have historically blocked commercial success: the absence of a general-purpose programming framework for spiking neural networks, and the difficulty of deploying trained SNN models at scale. The same paper reports that both obstacles are now being addressed: gradient-based training of deep spiking neural networks is described as "an off-the-shelf technique," and digital replacements for analogue circuit designs have simplified deployment while preserving computational benefits. These are progress reports from active researchers, not analyst forecasts.

MD-Konsult's research position is that the software-maturity argument, while valid as a description of current friction, is being used as a proxy for "the technology is not ready," when the more precise statement is that the technology is ready for a defined and commercially significant class of workloads, and the programming barriers for general-purpose deployment are being systematically reduced. The practical implication for institutional strategy is that organizations calibrating their assessment to the wrong threshold (general-purpose LLM-scale readiness rather than edge-inference and real-time sensor-processing readiness) are observing a real gap between neuromorphic and GPU capability but drawing an incorrect conclusion about strategic timing.

Two data points make the practical case:

  1. First, the NeuroBench framework, published in Nature Communications in February 2025 as a multi-institution collaboration spanning TU Delft, Rutgers, and industry partners, provides a standardised, peer-reviewed benchmarking methodology covering both hardware-independent algorithmic performance and hardware-dependent system performance. The existence of NeuroBench marks the transition from a field where performance claims are non-comparable to one where published results carry the evidentiary weight required for institutional procurement and policy analysis. 
  2. Second, the Netherlands national roadmap, drafted by Birch Consultants for Topsector ICT and co-authored by CogniGron, TU Eindhoven, TU Delft, Radboud University, and nine other institutions, explicitly notes that the Netherlands ecosystem "already covers almost the entire neuromorphic stack" and that "in most countries, neuromorphic research is either purely academic or purely industrial," whereas in the Netherlands both interact. That cross-sector coherence, formalized in a government-backed roadmap with a 10 to 30 year development horizon, constitutes a structural industrial policy signal of the type that precedes standardization and procurement consolidation.

Institutions that conduct structured assessments of neuromorphic applicability to their specific workloads in 2026 will produce internal benchmark data and vendor relationship capital that cannot be retroactively acquired once the technology transitions to standard commercial availability. That timing asymmetry is the primary strategic argument for action at the assessment and pilot stage rather than continued monitoring. The 24 to 36 month gap between an early institutional assessment and the point at which results would influence procurement decisions is precisely the window that the current evidence base, including the Nature, Science, and Nature Communications publications, the IEA energy projections, and the Dutch national roadmap, justifies opening.

4. Practitioner Perspective

"The conversation within engineering organizations changes materially when teams run their own inference benchmarks on neuromorphic hardware rather than reading vendor specifications. The energy profile for always-on, event-driven workloads is categorically different from GPU equivalents, in a way that restructures the trade-off analysis for edge deployment architecture. The friction is real on the software side, but it is the kind of friction that is resolved through engineering investment, not through waiting for the field to converge on its own."
Principal Systems Architect, Advanced Edge Computing Division, Tier-1 Defence Prime

This assessment reflects what the April 2025 Nature Communications commercialisation roadmap documents as the characteristic adoption pattern for specialised compute architectures: early deployment in resource-constrained environments, specifically battery-powered systems, local IoT compute, and consumer wearables, followed by migration into industrial automation and data-centre inference as toolchains mature. The authors draw an explicit analogy to the GPU adoption trajectory, noting that GPUs were in roughly the same commercialisation position in 2012: beyond the research prototype stage, with demonstrably superior performance on targeted workloads, but lacking the software ecosystem that would make them accessible as general-purpose compute substrates. That analogy carries an empirical implication: the organizations that built GPU competence in 2012 to 2014 captured the productivity and cost advantages of the subsequent decade of GPU-driven AI development.

5. Implications by Decision-Making Role

Role or InstitutionDecision Horizon and Priority ActionPrimary Risk if Deferred
Technology Strategy Executives (CTO, CIO, R&D Director) Commission a workload-mapping exercise targeting edge AI, always-on sensor processing, and real-time inference pipelines to identify which current GPU deployments are neuromorphic-compatible. Access Intel Loihi 2 cloud evaluation through the Intel Neuromorphic Research Community (INRC) or BrainChip Akida Cloud as zero-hardware-cost entry points for internal benchmarking. Build SNN toolchain competence using Intel Lava and the NeuroBench framework as the evaluation reference. Multi-year GPU infrastructure contracts that absorb stranded-asset risk as neuromorphic energy efficiency crosses conventional GPU economics in the 2028 to 2030 window for edge-inference workload classes.
Operations and Engineering Executives (COO, VP Engineering, Head of Infrastructure) Map current power procurement and data-center operating cost trajectories against the IEA's 945 TWh projection for 2030. Quantify the share of current inference workload that is sparse and event-driven, as this is the primary determinant of neuromorphic efficiency advantage. Initiate contact with Tier-1 defence and industrial primes that have active Akida deployments for cross-sector learning on transition architecture. Operational dependency on cloud-centric inference architectures that become economically or technically non-viable when sovereignty requirements, latency mandates, or bandwidth cost pressures tighten in regulated sectors including healthcare, critical national infrastructure, and defence electronics.
Finance and Governance Executives (CFO, Audit Committee, Investment Committee) Incorporate the IEA data-center energy consumption trajectory into long-range infrastructure cost modelling for organizations with material data-center footprints. Request a structured assessment of whether current multi-year GPU procurement commitments are priced to reflect potential obsolescence risk between 2028 and 2032. Use the Netherlands national roadmap and the €30M public investment programme as reference data for jurisdictional competitiveness analysis in technology investment decisions. Approval of capital expenditure commitments that do not account for the structural compute architecture transition now documented in peer-reviewed literature and national technology strategy documents.
Policy Analysts and Think Tank Researchers The Netherlands' Neuromorphic Computing Roadmap 2025, available through Topsector ICT and described by CogniGron at the University of Groningen, provides a fully documented template for national neuromorphic industrial policy, covering ecosystem mapping, sovereign investment rationale, technology stack coverage, and a 10 to 30 year development timeline. The IEA Energy and AI report and the Science, Nature, and Nature Communications publications listed in this document constitute a complete primary evidence base for comparative policy analysis and technology forecasting. Policy frameworks that continue to treat neuromorphic as a pre-commercial curiosity will be structurally out of date relative to jurisdictions that are now making sovereign infrastructure commitments based on published technical evidence.
Academic and Research Institutions The NeuroBench framework, published in Nature Communications Volume 16 (2025), provides the reference evaluation methodology for new neuromorphic algorithm and system publications. Groups pursuing hardware-independent SNN algorithm work should submit to the NeuroBench algorithm track; groups with physical chip access should contribute to the system track. The 2024 multi-institution roadmap provides a comprehensive gap analysis of where device physics, materials science, circuit architecture, and software integration require additional fundamental research. Publication of neuromorphic performance claims outside the NeuroBench framework will increasingly be treated as non-comparable by reviewers and institutional procurement staff, creating a citation and credibility gap for groups that do not align their evaluation methodology with the published standard.

6. Regulatory and Policy Landscape

The regulatory environment affecting neuromorphic computing is shaped primarily by energy policy rather than by technology-specific legislation, because neuromorphic chips do not yet fall within the high-risk AI system classifications established by the EU AI Act. The Act, which entered into force on 1 August 2024 and became fully applicable on 2 August 2026, contains energy efficiency provisions and environmental impact assessment requirements for general-purpose AI models with computation thresholds above 10^25 floating-point operations. These provisions create compliance incentives for energy-efficient inference architectures, including neuromorphic, for any organization deploying AI systems at scale within EU jurisdiction. Energy efficiency is therefore no longer exclusively an operating cost question but also a regulatory compliance variable for large-scale AI deployment within Europe.

The Netherlands national action plan, launched in October 2025 under Topsector ICT and formalised with a €30M investment commitment in April 2026, establishes a three-component structure: an NC NL alliance to develop and maintain the national neuromorphic roadmap and investment agenda; a national test and demonstration centre providing access to neuromorphic hardware and software for companies in energy, telecom, defence, medical technology, and semiconductors; and a shared prototyping facility enabling universities and industry to co-develop materials, architectures, and chips. The Radboud University announcement of the action plan explicitly frames neuromorphic as contributing to European digital sovereignty by reducing dependence on non-European chip technologies, connecting the technology to the broader EU Chips Act objectives and to the national technology strategies of at least four additional EU member states that have identified semiconductors as a priority key technology.

In the United States, neuromorphic computing sits within the broader semiconductor competitiveness and national security compute stack. Sandia National Laboratories is running active research programmes on both Intel Loihi 2 and the SpiNNaker 2 platform from TU Dresden, positioning neuromorphic within the national laboratory compute infrastructure alongside conventional HPC and quantum systems. DARPA's historical role in funding the original TrueNorth research at IBM, which preceded the NorthPole architecture, provides the precedent that defence-programme funding for neuromorphic hardware accelerates commercial standards development by creating validated test data and application use cases that private-sector vendors can reference in product development.

7. Limitations and Open Research Questions

An assessment of neuromorphic computing that does not address its limitations does not meet the evidentiary standard required for institutional use. The most substantive limitation is architectural: current neuromorphic processors, including NorthPole and Hala Point, cannot execute training workloads or large language models with billions of parameters. IBM's Science paper states this directly and frames multi-chip scaling as the engineering path to closing the gap. The appropriate analytical response is not to dismiss the technology but to recognise that it is being evaluated on the wrong performance axis: the transformative AI argument applies to general-purpose large-scale training and reasoning, while the documented commercial case applies to inference, edge deployment, and real-time sensor workloads where architectural fit produces reproducible and large efficiency gains.

Three open research questions are directly relevant to institutional planning horizons. First, the multi-chip scaling question for NorthPole: IBM has indicated that interconnecting multiple NorthPole chips is the next experimental step, but published multi-chip results are not yet available, and the efficiency gains of single-chip NorthPole may not scale linearly across a multi-chip interconnect. Second, the SNN training efficiency question: while gradient-based SNN training is now described as off-the-shelf by the Nature Communications commercialisation paper, the computational cost of training SNNs to the accuracy levels achieved by conventional deep learning on complex language and multi-modal tasks has not been resolved. Third, the standardisation gap: despite the NeuroBench publication, no regulatory or procurement-standard body has yet adopted a neuromorphic performance specification, which means that organizational procurement decisions cannot yet be anchored to a certified compliance metric.

Neuromorphic Computing 2026: From Research Prototype to Strategic Infrastructure Decision

8. Frequently Asked Questions

What is the precise architectural difference between a neuromorphic chip and a GPU, and why does it matter for energy consumption?

A GPU is a von Neumann architecture extended with massively parallel arithmetic units, but it retains the property that memory and computation are physically separate, requiring continuous high-bandwidth data transfer during operation. As the 2024 multi-institution neuromorphic computing roadmap identifies, this data transport cost constitutes the dominant energy expenditure for most inference workloads. A neuromorphic chip eliminates this cost by physically embedding memory within each computational unit, then communicating only through sparse binary spike events triggered by actual input rather than running continuous synchronous transfers. The practical consequence is that energy scales with information content (the density of meaningful input events) rather than with clock rate and memory bandwidth, producing categorical efficiency advantages on sparse, event-driven workloads.

What published benchmarks exist against which institutional technology assessments can be anchored?

The primary citable benchmarks are: IBM NorthPole versus GPU on ResNet-50 (22x latency reduction, 25x FPS/W improvement), published in Science in October 2023 by Modha et al.; Intel Hala Point's 15 TOPS/W at 8-bit precision in a 2,600W system, documented in Intel's newsroom and reviewed in Next Platform in April 2024; and the NeuroBench framework, published in Nature Communications Volume 16 in February 2025, which provides the methodology for producing comparable results across different hardware platforms.

What are the principal software tools available for teams beginning neuromorphic development work?

Three toolchains are currently in active development with documented deployment. Intel provides the Lava open-source framework for programming Loihi 2, accessible via the INRC cloud programme. BrainChip provides MetaTF, which converts TensorFlow models for Akida hardware, reducing the barrier to entry for teams with existing deep learning model libraries. Sandia's Whetstone toolchain, developed for converting CNNs to SNNs for Hala Point, is in operational use at a US national laboratory and represents the most validated conversion pipeline currently in public documentation. The NeuroBench framework provides the evaluation layer that allows results from these toolchains to be reported in a standardised, peer-reviewable format.

What is the current regulatory status of neuromorphic computing within the EU AI Act?

Neuromorphic chips are not specifically classified within the EU AI Act's risk taxonomy. The Act's most relevant provisions for neuromorphic are the energy efficiency and environmental impact requirements applying to general-purpose AI models with computation thresholds above 10^25 FLOP, which became fully applicable on 2 August 2026. These create indirect incentives for energy-efficient inference architectures. The more direct policy vehicle is the EU Chips Act and national industrial strategies, including the Netherlands roadmap, which frame neuromorphic as a sovereignty-relevant technology independent of any specific AI Act classification.

What is the honest assessment of the technology's limitations for an institution evaluating it for the first time?

Neuromorphic hardware in its current generation cannot train large-scale AI models, cannot run large language models in a single-chip configuration, and has not produced standardised benchmark results that procurement bodies have formally adopted. The software development experience is less mature than PyTorch or TensorFlow for GPU development, and the talent pool with SNN expertise is substantially smaller than the conventional deep learning workforce. These are real constraints, documented in both the Nature Communications commercialisation roadmap and in the Nature paper on scaling. The case for institutional attention rests not on these constraints being absent but on the demonstrated performance advantage for a defined workload class being large enough to justify structured assessment, on the constraints being actively reduced by published research, and on the competitive asymmetry between institutions that develop internal expertise now versus those that wait for the market to commoditise the technology.

How does the Netherlands national roadmap serve as a policy reference model for other jurisdictions?

The Neuromorphic Computing Roadmap 2025, commissioned by Topsector ICT and co-authored by CogniGron, TU Eindhoven, TU Delft, Radboud University, Rijksuniversiteit Groningen, TNO, imec Nederland, SURF, and five additional partners, covers the full technology stack from materials and device physics through algorithms and applications, and includes a governance model, an investment agenda, and a 10 to 30 year development timeline. CogniGron at the University of Groningen describes the Netherlands as covering "almost the entire neuromorphic stack," which is unusual internationally and is the basis for the claim of potential global leadership. The three-component action plan (NC NL alliance, national test and demonstration centre, shared prototyping facility) provides a replicable institutional model for other jurisdictions seeking to formalise neuromorphic investment coordination.

9. Related MD-Konsult Reading

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