Pakistan’s telecom sector, evolving digital infrastructure requirements, and long term investment outlook were examined in detail during Telecom Roundtable 2025, organized by Biz Today International and hosted by TCN Executive Forum powered by Advance Telecom. The forum was held on December 23, 2025, at Karachi Marriott Hotel and brought together senior industry professionals, technology leaders, and key stakeholders from across the telecom and enterprise ecosystem. The discussion centered on the theme Shaping the Future of Pakistan’s Telecom Ecosystem, reflecting the growing importance of reliable connectivity as a foundation for economic activity, public services, and digital transformation across the country.
The session was moderated by Dr Imran Batada, Director ICT at Institute of Business Management University, who guided the conversation toward issues of connectivity stability, regulatory coordination, and the increasing reliance of national sectors on uninterrupted digital infrastructure. Panelists included Jamal Ali Khan, Chief Growth Officer at eocean, Mohsin Kamal, Former Director South at Jazz, and Khurram Saif, Group CTO at Dr Ziauddin Group. Drawing from their experience across telecom operations, enterprise solutions, and healthcare driven digital transformation, the speakers emphasized that connectivity can no longer be viewed as a value added service but rather as a basic requirement for national development. Using healthcare as a reference point, panelists noted that solutions lose effectiveness if they only work for a limited segment of users, and the same principle applies to digital services that rely on inconsistent or unreliable networks.
A significant portion of the discussion focused on the education sector and its growing dependence on digital platforms such as Learning Management Systems, Training Management Systems, and Examination and Question Management Systems. Speakers highlighted that universities increasingly rely on digital infrastructure to manage academic schedules, assessments, and examinations, many of which are time bound and require uninterrupted access. International examination systems, including Cambridge and other global boards, were cited as examples where digital reliability is critical to trust and transparency. Panelists stressed that Pakistan must strengthen its digital backbone to support similar standards if it aims to maintain credibility in education and research. The conversation also addressed regulatory challenges, noting that overlapping authorities, multiple approval processes, and inconsistent policies often create uncertainty for investors. Participants agreed that policy consistency and long term regulatory clarity are essential to restoring investor confidence and encouraging both local and foreign investment in telecom infrastructure.
Market developments were also discussed, including the recent exit of Telenor from Pakistan, which panelists described as a moment that warrants serious reflection by regulators and policymakers. While consolidation can improve operational efficiency, speakers cautioned that reduced competition could impact service quality and innovation if not managed through balanced and transparent oversight. Despite these challenges, panelists maintained that Pakistan continues to present strong growth potential, particularly in broadband expansion, fiber deployment, and enterprise digital services. Emerging technologies such as satellite based internet were viewed as an opportunity to extend connectivity to remote and underserved regions, with speakers advocating a complementary approach where satellite, fiber, and wireless technologies work together rather than compete. The discussion also touched on 5G readiness, emphasizing that progress should be measured not only by speed but also by service quality, affordability, network stability, and ecosystem preparedness. Participants highlighted the role of Pakistan’s youth in driving the digital economy, noting a shift toward entrepreneurship, freelancing, startups, and platform based work. National institutions such as NADRA were identified as key enablers for digital identity driven services, fintech innovation, and API based governance, reinforcing the view that collaboration across regulators, operators, academia, and the private sector is central to shaping a sustainable telecom future.
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