Let’s talk about something that doesn’t get enough attention when we talk about AI: bandwidth.
AI gets a lot of headlines, but most of the spotlight stays on big tech, massive models, and billion-dollar data centers. What doesn’t get talked about enough is the invisible backbone making it all possible: the networks. And not just the ones in San Francisco or New York. The ones in your town. The ones you run.
AI isn’t just a tech trend happening somewhere else.
It’s already part of daily life, powering the apps your customers scroll through, the smart devices running in their homes, and the systems that local schools, hospitals, and businesses rely on to keep things running smoothly.
Even if you're not deploying AI tools directly, the impact is real. That traffic is already hitting your network, and it’s only getting heavier.
AI demand is already impacting local networks
Many modern workloads, especially those powered or supported by AI, move more data, more often, and can’t tolerate delays. Think smart cameras using AI for real-time analysis, remote health monitoring tools generating constant data streams, classroom platforms with personalized learning, or precision agriculture systems making decisions in the field.
All of these rely on fast, high-capacity networks. According to Zayo’s 2025 Bandwidth Report, hyperscalers drove over 40% of all wavelength deals above 1 terabit in the last few years. That’s a clear sign of what’s coming next, and it won’t stop at the city limits.
You may not operate at hyperscaler scale, but your customers expect the same smooth, responsive experiences whether they’re on a back road, in a classroom, or on a video call.
The cloud can’t carry this alone
Sure, the cloud handles the compute, but your network is the bridge to it. And AI-powered services rely on that bridge being fast and stable. If your network can’t carry the load, the experience breaks down. That’s when smart devices lag, video buffers, or AI-driven tools fail to respond in real time.
And that matters, because your network supports more than homes. It powers clinics using AI for diagnostics, farms syncing data from intelligent sensors, and schools adopting real-time learning tools. AI is already part of everyday experiences, and that kind of connectivity needs to be reliable when it counts.
AI is moving closer, and your network is the front line
AI isn’t just happening in distant data centers anymore. It’s coming to the edge, to local hospitals, main street businesses, and warehouses in your service area that need real-time processing close to where data is generated.
Zayo saw a 3000% spike in data center demand in markets like Salt Lake City and Memphis. That’s not just a trend in the usual tech hubs. It’s a sign that edge demand is rising fast, and smaller markets are in the spotlight.
This shift creates a real opportunity for local providers to lead, not just react. You’re closer to the customer, more agile, and better positioned to respond to what your community needs.
What Other Providers Are Prioritizing
The latest Zayo report shows that the providers preparing for this shift aren’t standing still. They’re investing in infrastructure that gives them the agility to keep up with growing demand.
Here’s where we’re seeing the most movement:
Higher-capacity bandwidth: Providers are adopting 400G-capable services to keep up with data growth.
Metro and long-haul dark fiber: These routes are becoming critical as demand grows closer to the edge.
Support for both cloud and local traffic: Networks are evolving to handle more real-time activity closer to where it’s happening.
Flexible service models: Approaches like Network-as-a-Service (NaaS) are giving providers more room to grow without major up-front investment.
These shifts aren’t about massive overhauls. They’re about staying responsive to what’s coming. Even modest steps in the right direction can help smaller ISPs stay competitive as customer expectations evolve.
Bandwidth is your advantage
The Intelligence Era isn’t just coming, it’s here. And it’s not reserved for the big players. In fact, local and regional providers are more important than ever. You’re the ones connecting farms, neighborhoods, and businesses that fuel the economy in places most tech companies overlook.
You have the proximity, the relationships, and the ability to move fast. And that’s exactly what the next generation of connectivity needs.
AI is changing what your customers expect. With the right steps, you can be the provider your community trusts today and into the future.