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Intent-based networking: unlocking the full potential of AI in autonomous networks

Toni Arcuri, CTO at Ni2, discusses how Intent-based networking (IBN), powered by AI, can transform telecom operations by aligning network behavior with business intent, enabling self-optimizing, scalable, and customer-focused networks through automation, intelligent decision-making, and real-time data.

Toni ArcuriToni Arcuri, Ni2
01 Jul 2025
Intent-based networking: unlocking the full potential of AI in autonomous networks

Intent-based networking: unlocking the full potential of AI in autonomous networks

As networks grow in complexity, traditional operational models struggle to meet the demands of ultra-low-latency applications, dynamic traffic patterns, and service personalization. Intent-Based Networking (IBN) offers a paradigm shift: operators specify what outcome is desired, not how to deliver it. This abstraction unlocks the full power of artificial intelligence (AI), driving automation, agility, and intelligent adaptation across modern communication networks.

This article explores the mutual reinforcement of IBN and AI, outlining the benefits, key technical enablers, and considerations for service providers transitioning toward AI-native, intent-driven operations.

The case for intent-based networking

IBN allows service providers to define high-level objectives—e.g., "Ensure 99% availability for critical IoT sensors in this zone" or "Support five simultaneous 4K gaming streams with <20ms latency." These intents are interpreted, validated, and executed by the system, translating business goals into precise technical configurations.

Key advantages of this approach:

  • Speed & agility: IBN accelerates time-to-market by automating service provisioning, eliminating weeks of manual intervention.
  • Customer-centricity: network behavior aligns with user experience through outcome-driven service design.
  • Scalability: IBN supports multi-domain, multi-vendor environments via standardized intent expression and fulfillment.

AI as the operational engine of IBN

While intent defines the what, AI enables the how. At scale, IBN requires continuous decision-making, adaptation, and optimization—natural domains for AI.

AI capabilities aligned with IBN include:

  • AI agents & autonomy: agentic AI can interpret intents, coordinate across BSS/OSS and cloud domains, monitor KPIs, learn from trends, and act in real-time to meet business goals.
  • Intent translation: NLP and ML refine vague or conflicting inputs, resolving ambiguity and generating viable configurations.
  • Predictive assurance: AI can foresee SLA risks or service degradation and proactively reconfigure the network to maintain quality.
  • Closed-loop automation: real-time feedback loops drive self-healing and performance optimization with minimal human intervention.

Standards-based foundations

Operationalizing IBN with AI depends on open, standards-based frameworks. TM Forum APIs are central to enabling interoperability and automation:

  • TMF921 (Intent Management API) enables BSS/OSS systems to submit and manage high-level intents.
  • TMF641 (Service Order Management API) ensures downstream orchestration platforms can act on interpreted intents.

These APIs connect AI agents, orchestration platforms, and inventory systems, making intent execution both scalable and repeatable.

The role of inventory in IBN + AI

A current, accurate, and federated view of network and service resources is essential to executing intent-based operations. Inventory serves as the real-time knowledge base AI relies on to turn high-level goals into actionable, optimized configurations.

How inventory supports intent execution

  • Translate intent into action
    Inventory provides live contextual data AI needs to interpret and validate intents like:
    “Guarantee <20ms latency for 4K gaming” or
    “Ensure 99.9% uptime for smart city IoT sensors.”
  • Automate with confidence
    Real-time visibility into physical and virtual assets ensures provisioning, optimization, and scaling decisions reflect the actual network state.
  • Power closed-loop assurance
    Inventory helps AI correlate network issues to impacted services and customer intents—essential for self-healing before SLAs are violated.

Inventory also supports critical technical functions:

  • Mapping high-level intents to viable configurations
  • Validating resource availability and constraints
  • Enabling dynamic pathfinding and service provisioning
  • Supporting real-time correlation for assurance and remediation

Requirements for success

To realize the benefits of IBN and AI, service providers must focus on foundational capabilities:

  • Data quality & observability: AI requires contextualized, accurate data from telemetry, analytics, and customer interactions.
  • Intent taxonomy & ontology: a shared language for goals, constraints, and outcomes is essential for AI interpretation and interoperability.
  • Integration layer: APIs must enable seamless communication across BSS, OSS, and partner ecosystems.
  • Governance & trust: clear policies define what decisions AI can autonomously make, ensuring compliance, transparency, and control.

Conclusion

IBN is more than a conceptual framework—it’s a practical operational model made viable by AI. As networks become more dynamic, the convergence of intent abstraction, AI-powered automation, and real-time inventory will define the future of telecom operations.

By investing now in IBN-aligned AI architectures, service providers can unlock new monetization opportunities, deliver exceptional customer experiences, and lead the evolution toward autonomous, agile networks.