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Future network services will not be shaped by technology alone. They will depend on how well the telecom ecosystem collaborates on coordination, capacity visibility and operational fit — and on turning ambition into repeatable execution.

TEASOL is joining the 6G Future Network Services (FNS) program. For us, this is not simply about being present in an innovation ecosystem. It is about contributing to a broader conversation on how future network services can become more structured, more relevant and more useful in real telecom environments.

The Future Network Services program is the Dutch national 6G initiative, bringing together operators, research institutions, industry and government to build an international leading position for the Netherlands in the next generation of mobile networks. Within the program, TEASOL will be active in Program Line 2, which focuses on intelligent networks.

At TEASOL, we keep coming back to one central question: how can changing service demand be matched with available network capacity in a way that is repeatable and operationally realistic?

That question is not unique to one type of operator. It matters to MNOs, MVNOs, neutral host providers, private network operators and infrastructure players alike — each dealing with similar operational challenges from a different angle.

Why ecosystem collaboration matters

As networks become more dynamic and service expectations continue to evolve, the industry faces a familiar gap: the distance between strategic intent and operational reality. Many players know what they want to improve. The harder part is turning that ambition into a workable model that supports day-to-day execution.

That is where ecosystem collaboration becomes essential. Future network services will require more than isolated innovation. They will require alignment across stakeholders, practical validation and a willingness to explore how different parts of the ecosystem can work together more effectively.

For TEASOL, this means staying close to the real operational questions behind network sharing and demand-to-capacity matching and learning from the wider ecosystem, not just from a single type of network operator or market segment.

What TEASOL brings to the conversation

TEASOL is focused on structured demand-to-capacity matching: connecting changing service demand to available network capacity in a way that is transparent, repeatable and grounded in operational fit.

We believe this focus is relevant because many telecom and connectivity players are still dealing with manual coordination, fragmented visibility and complex execution paths. Those challenges do not disappear simply because a concept is technically possible — they need to be addressed in a way that fits how organisations actually operate.

That is why we value ecosystem settings like the FNS program. They create a space where innovation can be discussed in context, validated through real conversations and shaped by perspectives from across the telecom landscape.

Why this matters across the ecosystem

The opportunity is broader than any one player or business model. Across MNOs, MVNOs, neutral hosts, private networks and infrastructure providers, teams are asking remarkably similar questions:

MNO MVNO Neutral Host Private Network Infrastructure TEASOL Exchange demand ↔ capacity
TEASOL Exchangedemand ↔ capacity
Connecting demand with capacity across the ecosystem
MNO MVNO Neutral Host Private Network Infrastructure
One matching layer across the ecosystem: TEASOL Exchange connects changing demand with available capacity for MNOs, MVNOs, neutral host providers, private network operators and infrastructure players.

Five questions across the ecosystem

1
Demand Where is demand changing?
2
Capacity Where is capacity available?
3
Coordination How can stakeholder coordination become less manual?
4
Repeatability What would make execution more repeatable?
5
Operating model How can a more structured operating model support practical decision-making?

These are not abstract questions. They determine whether an idea stays theoretical or becomes operationally useful. For TEASOL, that is where the conversation gets interesting. We are not looking to overstate what our product does today — our focus is on validation, learning and operational relevance.

Looking ahead

Promising concept
Practical validation
FNS program
Repeatable execution
Everyday practice
From promising concept to everyday practice — the path TEASOL is pursuing, with the FNS program as the space for practical validation.

Future network services will not be shaped by technology alone.

Joining the Future Network Services (FNS) program is a deliberate step in TEASOL's broader journey. It allows us to contribute to the discussion around future network services while continuing to refine our thinking on structured demand-to-capacity matching, operational fit and repeatable execution in real telecom environments.

We see this as an opportunity to exchange perspectives, explore practical use cases and help shape a conversation that will define the future of connectivity.

We look forward to learning together with the wider ecosystem — and to continuing the discussion on how future network services can move from promising concept to everyday practice.

More about the Future Network Services program: www.futurenetworkservices.nl

About TEASOL

TEASOL Technologies develops TEASOL Exchange, a platform focused on structured demand-to-capacity matching for the mobile network sharing ecosystem: connecting dynamic service demand with available capacity on another network in a way that is transparent, repeatable and operationally realistic. TEASOL works with MNOs, MVNOs, neutral host providers, and private network operators, with a focus on practical validation in real telecom environments. More at www.teasol.com.

Building future network services, together

TEASOL is contributing to the FNS program's work on intelligent networks. See how our approach to demand-to-capacity matching works in practice.

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