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Salesforce Launches Agentforce for Communications to Drive AI-Led Telcos

Salesforce unveiled Agentforce for Communications, a new industry-specific AI offering aimed at helping telecom operators increase revenue and reduce churn. The launch targets a sector grappling with slowing growth, declining average revenue per user (ARPU), and customer churn rates that can reach 40%. Salesforce cites industry projections showing telecom revenue growth slowing to 2.9% by 2029, with ARPU falling to $6.20, despite heavy investment in 5G and digital transformation initiatives.

Agentforce for Communications introduces five pre-built AI agents designed to support sales, service, and field operations. Built on Salesforce’s Agentforce 360 platform, the agents integrate live data from CRM systems, Operations Support Systems (OSS), and Business Support Systems (BSS). The platform enables real-time actions such as resolving billing disputes, generating complex B2B quotes, monitoring service-level objectives, grouping multi-site deals, and identifying upsell opportunities during field visits. Salesforce positions the offering as domain-specific AI with embedded telecom guardrails and customer context.

Early adopters include One NZ, Lumen Technologies, and Personal (Telecom Argentina). One NZ reports a fourfold increase in engagement through its AI assistant compared to traditional digital and physical channels. Lumen says Agentforce helps reclaim more than 300 hours of productivity per week by reducing manual processes tied to complex quoting and service management workflows.

The five pre-built AI agents include:

“With Agentforce Communications, we’re helping telecom companies work smarter by connecting every part of their business, from sales to customer service to field operations, with AI agents that work 24/7 alongside human teams,” said David Fan, Senior Vice President & General Manager, Communications, Salesforce.

Analysis: Salesforce continues to verticalize its AI portfolio, following similar industry-focused launches in financial services and healthcare. The telecom sector presents a complex integration challenge given legacy OSS/BSS stacks, but also offers high-value automation targets in billing, quoting, and service assurance. Competitors such as ServiceNow, Microsoft, and Oracle are also pushing AI copilots into telecom workflows, making domain-specific integration and deep data access key differentiation points.

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