Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
NYSE-listed (T) US pure-play telecom at $122.4B revenue after WarnerMedia and DirecTV divestitures; AT&T Fiber expanding to 45M+ homes competing with T-Mobile and Verizon for wireless and broadband growth.
AT&T Inc. is a Dallas, Texas-based telecommunications company — listed on NYSE (NYSE: T) — providing wireless mobile services, fiber broadband (AT&T Fiber), and business network solutions to 100+ million consumers and enterprises across the United States, making it the world's largest telecommunications company by revenue. Following the 2022 spinoff of WarnerMedia (now Warner Bros. Discovery) and the 2024 completion of DirecTV's separation as a standalone company through the TPG partnership, AT&T generated $122.4 billion in revenue in fiscal year 2024 as a pure-play connectivity company focused on wireless and fiber broadband growth.
NYSE-listed enterprise fiber network and connectivity provider post-CenturyLink rebrand; divested consumer broadband to refocus on enterprise digital services competing with AT&T Business.
CenturyLink, now rebranded as Lumen Technologies (NYSE: LUMN), is a telecommunications and technology company providing enterprise fiber networking, cloud connectivity, security services, and legacy broadband internet — primarily focused on enterprise and mid-market business customers after strategic divestitures of its consumer broadband and Latin American businesses. Lumen Technologies operates one of the largest fiber networks in North America and competes for enterprise digital transformation infrastructure contracts with AT&T Business, Verizon Business, and cloud hyperscalers.\n\nLumen's enterprise offerings center on high-bandwidth private network connectivity (MPLS and SD-WAN), dedicated internet access via fiber, cybersecurity services (DDoS protection, managed security), and co-location data center services. The company went through significant portfolio transformation in 2021-2022, selling its Latin American operations to Stonepeak for $2.7 billion and its legacy ILEC (incumbent local exchange carrier) consumer broadband business in 20 states to Apollo Global Management for $7.5 billion — refocusing on enterprise digital services from its remaining fiber infrastructure.\n\nIn 2025, Lumen Technologies faces a challenging financial position with substantial debt load and revenue decline as legacy copper-based voice and data services erode faster than enterprise fiber growth can offset. The company has engaged in debt restructuring discussions and cost reduction programs to stabilize the business. The strategic question for Lumen is whether its fiber network infrastructure has sufficient competitive value in an enterprise market where cloud connectivity increasingly flows through hyperscaler direct connections rather than telco-managed networks. The 2025 strategy focuses on winning enterprise fiber connectivity and security contracts, managing the legacy service revenue decline, and completing financial restructuring to reduce interest burden.
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