Strategic Wireless Investments are Driving Higher ROI for Enterprises in the AI Era: Cisco
Cisco released its inaugural State of Wireless Report,
revealing that Wi-Fi has evolved into a strategic growth engine capable of
delivering a multiplier effect—where a single network investment drives
compounding returns across employee productivity, customer engagement, and
revenue. Based on a survey of over 6,000 global wireless professionals, the
report underscores that as organizations reach an inflection point in
connectivity demand, those who prioritize wireless strategically are achieving
significantly higher business value than their peers.
This business value is governed by the "wireless AI
paradox": while AI is a primary driver of wireless ROI, it may also fuel
operational complexity and security risks. Whether this dynamic becomes a
barrier or a competitive advantage depends on how organizations navigate it.
The report provides a strategic roadmap—integrating AI-driven automation,
modern security, and specialized expertise—to help address these potential
challenges. By taking this holistic approach, the report suggests,
organizations are four times more likely to achieve strong returns, turning
their wireless infrastructure into a powerful competitive edge.
Modern wireless drives
better outcomes for customers, operations, employees, and revenue
The rise of the Internet of Things, AI workloads, and
high-bandwidth applications like 4K/8K streaming and AR/VR are now the primary
drivers for wireless modernization. As organizations adapt to these demands
alongside shifting workplace trends like hot desking and BYOD, they are
significantly increasing their wireless budgets:
· 80%
increased spending over the last five years
· 29%
increased budgets by 50% or more over those five years
· 82%
forecast continued budget increases over the next 4-5 years
· 35%
expect to increase budgets by 50% or more over this time
Those already modernizing are experiencing a multiplier
effect—where an investment in wireless generates multiple positive business
outcomes:
· 78%
report operational efficiency gains
· 75%
see employee productivity improvements
· 75%
observe enhanced customer engagement
· 68%
experience positive revenue impacts from wireless investments
"The enterprise workforce is evolving into blended teams of humans, AI agents, and automated systems, all operating together at machine speed. Wi-Fi is the foundation that makes that possible, connecting every endpoint, protecting every interaction, and unlocking the operational insights that drive smarter decisions across the business," said Anurag Dhingra, SVP & GM, Enterprise Connectivity & Collaboration, Cisco. "AI is both the biggest opportunity and the biggest test for enterprise networks right now."
The survey shows organizations are accelerating the refresh
of wireless networks, with an increasing percentage of respondents planning to
upgrade to the 6GHz spectrum. Nearly three in five organizations report plans
to deploy Wi-Fi 6E or Wi-Fi 7 in the next year for modernized connectivity.
The Wireless AI Paradox
While AI drives innovation, it introduces three interconnected
areas that—when successfully navigated—make organizations four times more
likely to achieve wireless ROI (4:1 or higher). To harness this competitive
advantage, organizations should consider prioritizing:
Reducing operational complexity: With nearly all
organizations (98%) reporting rising wireless complexity, many teams are
trapped in a reactive cycle that drains resources, diverts resources away from
strategic work, and undermines AI initiatives. To manage this, more than four
surveyed organizations prefer a fully or mostly automated wireless network
powered by AI-driven operations. This approach is proven: 98% of those already
using AI automation report substantial gains, saving an average of 3 hours and
20 minutes per person, per day.
Mitigating wireless security risks: AI-generated security
incidents are a leading driver of increased wireless security risk. Over half
of organizations report financial losses from wireless security incidents, with
half of them exceeding US$1 million annually. Over a third of affected
organizations point to compromised Internet of Things (IoT) or Operational
Technology (OT) devices as the culprits.
Addressing competition for wireless personnel: A significant
personnel shortage is amplifying operational challenges. Nearly nine in ten
wireless leaders are struggling to hire qualified professionals, citing
increasing talent movement to roles in areas like AI and cybersecurity. This
talent gap is costly: organizations facing more significant hiring difficulties
are more likely to incur security incident costs that are 70% higher annually
than those with no recruitment challenges.































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