Key takeaways
- 5G’s high-bandwidth, low-latency connectivity can be customized to your business needs, well beyond the smartphone.
- Virtually anywhere your people are—urban or rural, desk-based or in the field—5G can help everyone stay connected and productive.
- 5G is here now, helping industry innovators from airlines to entertainment find new efficiencies and deliver more meaningful experiences when they matter most.
The game-changing potential of 5G.
Your business can thrive when it has the right connectivity to grow. That’s why the speed, capacity, low latency, and far-reaching coverage potential of 5G are game changers.
Unlike
“Business breakthroughs don’t just happen inside a company’s walls or within the reach of
In a video that explores some of the many ways businesses use 5G across industries, Samson notes that one of the driving factors in 5G’s growing adoption is its ability to enable new kinds of innovation in new places.
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Innovating Beyond Walls & Wi-Fi
“Inside of a building with really fast
On the job, on the go.
5G is a popular and in-demand capability among consumers and businesses eager to benefit from its performance advantages compared to
“When you talk about innovation, it’s not just how fast my iPhone can download my Facebook page,” says Samson. “It’s really thinking beyond the phone and about all of the different capabilities.”
For businesses across industries—like healthcare, entertainment, retail, and others—5G offers flexibility for a wide range of use cases and application requirements. Of course, different businesses can have dramatically different requirements. “Some have incredibly high bandwidth demands; some need very low latency,” says Samson. “With 5G, you can have all of these, tailored to a specific need.”
In transportation and logistics, 5G can better connect fleets of trucks on the open road, and orchestrate vehicles, goods, and wearables on people in a dynamic Internet of Things (IoT) network. Synthesizing those 5G-enabled data streams can offer more timely analytics and forecasting opportunities for business planners, including technologies like digital twins to further optimize routes and delivery windows.
5G may also facilitate the transition to assisted or self-driving long-haul trucking fleets. As operations get closer to 24/7 uptime, the daily range of a single vehicle might grow from 600 miles without automation to 1,200 miles with it.
Small fleets of self-driving trucks already operate in controlled environments, like landfills. Until recently, most of these industrial systems were running on
Increased efficiency and safety, on-site or off.
“There's a ton of autonomous and semi-autonomous 5G innovations that are available right now… making all of these different industries more efficient and delivering better customer service.”
Allan Samson, Sr. Vice President,
5G in construction offers new opportunities to roll out remotely-piloted or autonomous equipment. for instance, operators in one location can remotely manage excavator machines many miles away. On a highway project, a contractor might deploy a fleet of self-driving road pavers tapping 5G, advanced GPS, and vehicle-to-everything (V2X) technology.
Possibilities are nearly limitless.
Beyond rugged industrial settings, 5G is fueling new efficiencies and experiences in healthcare, education, and across the service industry. For instance, airlines are exploring how 5G can support improvements in customer care and on-time departures, areas of strategic differentiation in a highly competitive market.
In healthcare, 5G is already being used for patient monitoring, virtual visits, and robot-assisted surgery. “5G is not just for specific industries,” Samson explains. “The list goes on and on.”
Here are some of the other ways that 5G is being used to create new business opportunities:
- On the education front, 5G public and private networks can be used to deliver extended reality (XR) experiences, on-campus or virtually. It’s a way to provide practical, hands-on training and immersive research and modeling tools to more students and educators beyond the physical classroom.
- The sports industry is using 5G to create interactive and immersive spectator experiences. Using smart glasses, fans at a stadium are able to access real-time stats—How fast was that pitch thrown?—or follow a home run ball as it leaves a player’s bat. At
T-Mobile Park, home of the Seattle Mariners, fans are even able to step onto the field, virtually, to throw a pitch or take a swing. - In other entertainment, the Red Bull Rampage mountain bike competition gave a taste of 5G-powered sports viewership with drone cameras delivering thrilling close-up footage as elite cyclists sped and soared down the jagged peaks in southwest Utah. Large amounts of bandwidth were required—and enabled by 5G—to support multiple high-def live streams with AR overlays of biometric and telematic data. It was as immersive as being there in person—without the dust and heat.
Real opportunities and benefits are here today.
These are just the beginning of a fresh wave of opportunities that 5G provides beyond the traditional walls of business. “5G creates an ecosystem of innovation,” says Samson.
This is true across industries, whether a business is based in a big city or miles down a country road. With 5G, “talent can stay rural and do their jobs remotely over broadband,” adds Samson. “They have access to amazing jobs just the same as if they lived in New York.”
In other words, the potential benefits of 5G extend well beyond improved efficiency, productivity, and network performance. Businesses can cast the talent net wider and attract and retain employees with in-demand skills.
5G is a great enabler, a powerful tool to get more business done. “It's connectivity that’s always on,” says Samson. “The leaders of tomorrow will take that capability and rethink how they deliver products and services.”