Why telcos need a telco fabric?
Download the full brief

Kenmei launches its Network Performance Data Product on Microsoft Fabric, turning the network into an agent-ready operators own and control

Matteo Gasparello
June 22, 2026

The new data product runs on Microsoft Fabric and delivers governed network KPIs inside the operator’s own Microsoft Fabric environment, with an ontology layer that lets AI agents reason over the network out of the box.

VALENCIA, Spain — June 23, 2026 — Kenmei today announced the availability of its Network Performance Data Product, running on Microsoft Fabric and accessible through Microsoft Marketplace.

For mobile operators, the performance data that drives network planning, optimization, and operations is unified with their broader enterprise data in Microsoft OneLake—governed and ready to use.

FROM NETWORK DATA TO AGENTIC AI

The data product ships with an ontology layer, a shared semantic model of the network, that turns raw counters into business meaning. That layer is what makes the network agent-ready: AI agents reason over consistent, well-defined network concepts rather than re-interpreting raw data in every project.

Operators move from dashboards to autonomous, agent-driven use cases without rebuilding their data foundation each time.

WHAT THIS MEANS FOR THE OPERATOR

Your data stays yours. It runs in the operator’s own Fabric environment. Network data and permissions never leave that boundary, not even to the data partner.

One platform, not another silo. KPIs sit alongside the operator’s other enterprise data, under the governance, security and identity controls already in place across Microsoft Fabric.

Reuse everywhere, with no integration tax. The same governed KPIs and ontology feed reporting, analytics and AI agents, with no new pipeline per use case.

Faster path to value. Acquired through Microsoft Marketplace against the operator’s existing Azure commitment, with capacity that scales to the workload and pauses when idle.

“Network teams have spent years moving KPIs from one system into another. With this data product, the operator’s network data lands inside Microsoft Azure already modeled and governed, so it can feed both today’s analytics and tomorrow’s agents from day one.” — Vicent Soler, CEO, Kenmei

“Operators want their network data in their own platform, under their own governance, and ready for whatever comes next. By embedding the data product in Microsoft OneLake and grounding it in an ontology, the network itself becomes agent-ready: the operator’s data, in the operator’s tenant, working the moment it lands.” — Alessandra Antonelli, Global Leader Strategy & Solutions, Telco & Media, Microsoft

AVAILABILITY

The Network Performance Data Product is available now through Microsoft Marketplace, with Kenmei as a Microsoft technology partner for the network-data domain on Microsoft Fabric.

Operators can request access through Kenmei, their Microsoft account team, or Microsoft Marketplace listing.

ABOUT KENMEI

Kenmei is the intelligence behind mobile networks. Its mission is to turn complex network data into operational decisions, helping operators get more from their data with faster insights and fewer repetitive tasks.

Kenmei is a Microsoft technology partner for the network-data domain on Microsoft Fabric.

We’re building the autonomous networks of the future.

Get the insights, strategies, and lessons from those doing the work.

By clicking Subscribe to Kenmei Insights you're confirming that you agree with our Terms and Conditions.
Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.

Related posts

From complexity to clarity: here are more stories worth reading.

AI Agents & Data Fabric

Automation isn’t the end goal. Intelligence is. Learn how telcos can evolve from fragmented tools to full autonomy. One smart step at a time.

Diagnostics & RCA

The communication systems powering Spain’s railways are showing their age.

Diagnostics & RCA

You don’t manage one network. Telecom operators and CSPs often manage dozens (and most don’t talk to each other).