- Telkomsel secured three major awards at the 2025 Glotel Awards, including “Connecting the Unconnected” and “IoT Initiative of the Year”.
- The recognition highlights Telkomsel’s push to broaden connectivity across Indonesia, though questions remain about how these jet-setting accolades translate into real-world improvements for underserved communities.
What happened: Telkomsel secures three prestigious awards at 2025 glotels in London
At the 2025 Global Telecoms Awards — known as the Glotels — held in central London, Telkomsel distinguished itself by taking home three of the 24 honours on offer.
Notably, Telkomsel won in the “Connecting the Unconnected” category for its efforts to expand connectivity to Indonesia’s remote westernmost islands — a region where geography and infrastructure typically pose difficult challenges.
Additionally, Telkomsel was named winner of “IoT Initiative of the Year”, underscoring its commitment to delivering Internet-of-Things solutions.
A third win came under “Delighting the Customer”, jointly with Huawei, for an “AI-Augmented Digital Twins” initiative.
The event brought together leading global telecom players, with firms such as Huawei and Netcracker also picking up awards, pointing to a broad, competitive field across the industry.
Also read: Telkomsel: Driving Indonesia’s digital future
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Why it’s important
The fact that Telkomsel — an operator based in Indonesia — claimed multiple Glotel Awards signals its increasingly global standing, and suggests that innovation in telecommunications remains highly dispersed. For an operator outside of traditional Western or East Asian powerhouses to clinch significant awards speaks to the growing competitiveness of emerging-market telecom firms.
For Indonesia, the “Connecting the Unconnected” win could hint at efforts to narrow the digital divide, particularly in remote or underserved regions. If the project delivers as promised, it may significantly improve access to internet services — with important implications for education, commerce, and social inclusion.
Winning the “IoT Initiative of the Year” suggests Telkomsel is not only expanding basic connectivity but also investing in advanced solutions — perhaps paving the way for smarter infrastructure, logistics, and services. Meanwhile, the “Delighting the Customer” award reflects a focus on customer experience and innovation (via AI-augmented digital twins), which may help differentiate Telkomsel in a crowded market.
Nonetheless, the widespread accolades raise a few questions. Awards ceremonies like the Glotels can often be a blend of genuine recognition and industry optics — how much of the success translates into real, measurable improvements for end users remains to be seen. For instance, extending connectivity to remote islands is laudable — but will users see affordable, reliable, high-quality service? Will the IoT initiatives be accessible outside major urban or industrial centres?
Moreover, while such honours can boost a company’s reputation, they don’t guarantee that infrastructure upgrades or technological rollouts will be sustained or scaled effectively. It remains to be observed how Telkomsel’s operations — such as in low-income or remote communities — will evolve over time, especially in terms of affordability and network stability.
In that sense, this set of awards is a milestone, but not a finish line. It provides a marker: Telkomsel is clearly being recognised on a global stage. The more relevant test will be whether that recognition results in tangible, inclusive improvements in connectivity and digital services across Indonesia.
