2025 Broadband Year in Review, Part 1

 

 

In this episode of Wavelengths, the Amphenol Broadband Solutions podcast, host Daniel Litwin sits down with Alex Rozek, Founder and CEO of Mac Mountain, to unpack the defining shifts that shaped the broadband industry in 2025 and what they signal for the years ahead. 

As the industry approaches the end of 2025, broadband looks markedly different than it did just a year ago. Fiber and fixed wireless continue to challenge cable’s long-held dominance, BEAD funding has been rewritten midstream, spectrum has changed hands at historic scale, and satellites have emerged as a more viable connectivity option for a growing number of users. At the same time, new operating and financing models are reshaping how networks are built, owned, and operated. 

Rozek brings a builder’s perspective to this year-in-review conversation, drawing on his experience investing in, operating, and scaling broadband businesses. In Part 1 of this two-part discussion, the focus centers on financing trends, content shifts, and the growing momentum behind broadband-as-a-service models that treat connectivity less like a one-time construction project and more like a long-term utility. 

Key Discussion Highlights: 

  • The 2025 Financing Landscape: Rozek outlines how broadbandremainsa capital-intensive business, but one where capital continues to flow, from private credit and municipal bonds to large-scale satellite investments, highlighting how financing structures are evolving alongside network deployment strategies. 
  • BEAD’s Mid-Flight Reset: He discusses how changes to BEAD funding rules in 2025 expanded eligible technologies and altered expectations around grant availability, forcing operators and communities to rethink how projects are financed and prioritized.
  • Content as a Catalyst: Rozek explores how cord-cutting, streaming adoption, and ESPN’s move to a direct-to-consumer streaming model represent a major inflection point—reducing friction for data-only broadband adoption and reshaping how consumers think about connectivity.
  • Broadband as a Service Explained: Drawing from firsthand experience with municipal networks and tax-advantaged financing, Rozek explains how separating network assets from operations unlocks lower-cost capital, operational scale, and more sustainable long-term economics.
  • Efficiency Through Scale: He details whyconsolidatingbilling, network operations, customer service, and systems across multiple networks creates meaningful efficiencies, allowing operators to manage larger footprints without linear cost increases. 

This episode sets the foundation for a deeper exploration of how service models, partnerships, and differentiated customer acquisition strategies are redefining broadband deployment. In Part 2, the conversation continues with a closer look at competition across fiber, cable, fixed wireless, and satellite, and how operators can position themselves for long-term success in a rapidly evolving connectivity landscape. 

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