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The telecom landscape has entered an era of convergence, and for broadband and cable providers, standing still is no longer an option.
As mobile network operators (MNOs) double down on fixed-wireless access and streaming giants fragment the entertainment market, broadband providers face threats to their relevance and revenue.
The answer is not to fight this convergence but to lead it. The strategic imperative is clear: broadband providers must go mobile.
The industry has reached a tipping point. To protect their core business and find new growth avenues, broadband providers must turn to mobile.
Why Broadband Providers Must Enter the Mobile Space
The case for broadband providers entering the mobile market is both defensive and offensive.
On the defensive side, broadband is under siege. Fixed-wireless access from mobile carriers is pulling customers away from traditional cable internet, eroding one of the core revenue pillars of broadband businesses. On the offensive side, mobile represents an enormous growth opportunity that complements an existing broadband customer base.
Broadband providers already have trusted relationships with millions of households, along with billing infrastructure, customer service operations, and brand recognition. What they often lack is a mobile offering. Yet mobile connectivity has become the primary way people communicate, work, and consume content. A provider that offers broadband but not mobile is leaving a meaningful share of each customer's telecom wallet on the table.
Switching from a single service provider to a converged provider (offering both home internet and mobile) delivers significant benefits. Here are the key elements of why this strategy works:
Network Cost Leverage through Wi‑Fi: Broadband providers sit on vast Wi‑Fi assets that can offload the bulk of mobile traffic. This not only improves customer experience; it reduces MVNO wholesale costs by shifting traffic off the rented cellular network to owned fixed infrastructure.
Address Market Saturation: In most developed markets, fixed broadband penetration is more than 80%. Growth in the fixed-only segment is largely a zero-sum battle for subscribers. Mobile, by contrast, is a more dynamic category shaped by frequent device upgrades and evolving data needs. It offers a fresh path to average revenue per user (ARPU) growth in an otherwise stagnant market.
Comcast (Xfinity Mobile): Comcast launched Xfinity Mobile in April 2017, operating as an MVNO on Verizon's network. Initially available exclusively to broadband subscribers, the service surpassed 1 million subscribers as early as Q3 2018. Comcast reported its best year on record in 2025, adding nearly 1.5 million net lines. By the end of 2025, Xfinity Mobile surpassed 9 million total lines. In Q3 2025 alone, domestic wireless revenue hit $1.246 billion, representing a 14% year-over-year increase.
Optimum: Optimum Communications, Inc. (previously Altice USA) successfully rebranded its mobile service and deepened integration with its fiber rollout. Optimum ended 2025 with 623,000 mobile lines, a massive 35% increase in just one year. By integrating mobile with their fiber rollout, they achieved a higher Broadband ARPU, proving that mobile users are significantly higher-value customers.
Challenges in Launching a Mobile Offering
Despite the compelling opportunity, broadband providers must navigate a set of real challenges on the path to mobile. Recognizing these hurdles is the first step toward overcoming them.
Technology and Systems Complexity: Launching a mobile service requires integration with an MNO's network, real-time billing and provisioning, SIM or eSIM lifecycle management, and a seamless customer experience across digital and physical channels. Legacy broadband BSS/OSS stacks are rarely mobile-ready; building or integrating these capabilities can be time-consuming and expensive without the right technology partner.
MNO Negotiation and Wholesale Pricing: Securing favorable wholesale rates from a host MNO is critical to profitability. Providers with limited experience in the mobile wholesale market may find margins squeezed, particularly in early stages before subscriber volumes justify better terms. Selecting the right MNO partner and structuring agreements that allow for volume-based pricing improvements is essential.
Customer Experience: Mobile customers have high expectations shaped by years of interaction with leading consumer apps and digital-first telcos. A clunky onboarding process, fragmented billing experience, or poor self-service functionality can undermine the brand and drive early churn. Providers must commit to a digital-first, customer-centric mobile experience from day one.
Internal Capabilities and Go-to-Market Readiness: Mobile is a different business from broadband in several key respects. Device logistics, port-in processes, plan design, and retention dynamics all require specialized expertise. Building these capabilities internally takes time. Partnering with a proven MVNO enablement platform can dramatically accelerate time to market and reduce the risk of costly missteps.
The Time to Act Is Now — and Circles Can Get You There
The evidence is overwhelming. Broadband providers that enter mobile grow faster, retain customers longer, and generate more revenue per household. Those that wait face a widening competitive gap as telcos, digital players, and even retailers consolidate their positions in the converged connectivity market.
The question is no longer whether broadband providers should go mobile, but how to do so efficiently, intelligently, and at speed.
This is where Circles offers a decisive advantage. Circles' CirclesX SaaS platform has already powered the launch of market-defining digital MVNOs for global operators, including KDDI in Japan, e& in the Middle East, AT&T's digital brand in Mexico, and Telkomsel in Indonesia — delivering industry-leading customer satisfaction and monetization in each market.
Circles can help mobile operators, including broadband and cable providers, launch and scale world-class mobile offerings without the traditional complexity or capital burden.
With Circles as a partner, the path from broadband-only to fully converged connectivity provider has never been more accessible, more proven, or more strategically critical.
Ready to explore how Circles can help you launch your mobile business? Contact Circles for a demo and turn your broadband business into a converged powerhouse today.