Ericsson has entered a strategic partnership with LotusFlare to help operators expose and monetize network capabilities through standardized network APIs. The deal adds LotusFlare’s DNO Cloud platform—used for consent management, digital commerce, and API exposure—to Ericsson’s growing portfolio for Communication Service Providers (CSPs). Ericsson also took a minority stake in LotusFlare, which is headquartered in Santa Clara and employs about 500 people worldwide.
The companies plan to publish shared solution blueprints covering integration scenarios for the Network API Exposure Layer, including API access and consent management. These assets aim to help CSPs accelerate commercial API deployments across 5G networks and emerging AI-driven services. The partnership also strengthens Ericsson’s broader Network Platform strategy, which combines programmable network functions, global API aggregation from Aduna, and Vonage’s enterprise developer ecosystem.
Vonage will use the expanded supply of network APIs to enable developers and enterprises to build new network-powered applications, ranging from QoS-aware communications to advanced mobility, IoT, and edge-enabled services. Financial terms of the minority investment were not disclosed.
• Ericsson acquires a minority stake in LotusFlare
• LotusFlare’s DNO Cloud adds consent management and digital commerce for API monetization
• Joint solution blueprints target faster CSP deployments of API exposure layers
• Integration aligns with Ericsson + Vonage strategy for developer-ready network capabilities
• Supports 5G and AI-driven service innovation across global operator networks
Niklas Heuveldop, Senior Vice President and Head of Business Area Global Communications Platform at Ericsson and CEO of Vonage, says: “The combination of Ericsson’s high-performance, programmable networks with LotusFlare’s Network Abstraction capabilities, Aduna’s global network API aggregation capabilities, and Vonage’s network-powered enterprise solutions will accelerate CSPs’ ability to unlock new network capabilities.”
🌐 Analysis: The partnership strengthens Ericsson’s Network Platform architecture and deepens its control over the network API value chain, building on its acquisitions of Vonage and Aduna. It positions Ericsson to compete more directly with Nokia, which has been scaling its Network as Code platform, and aligns with a broader industry push to standardize telco APIs for developers and enterprise applications.
