Radcom Ltd
F:RAM
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Endesa SA
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Radcom Ltd
Radcom Ltd makes software that helps mobile network operators monitor and troubleshoot their networks. Its main products collect data from voice, text, and data traffic, then turn that information into alerts and reports so carriers can spot service problems, measure call quality, and find the source of outages faster. The company sells mainly to telecom operators and network service providers who need to keep large wireless and IP networks running reliably. Radcom usually earns money by licensing its software and selling related support, maintenance, and subscription-style services. Customers use its systems as part of network operations, so the business sits in the telecom infrastructure layer rather than in consumer phones or carrier services. That makes Radcom different from many software vendors because its tools are tied to the day-to-day health of mission-critical communications networks. The company’s role is to help carriers improve service quality, reduce downtime, and manage the growing complexity of 4G, 5G, and packet-based networks. In practice, Radcom gives network teams a way to see what is happening inside the network and fix issues before customers notice them. Its business depends on long-term relationships with telecom operators that need specialized assurance software, not on mass-market software sales.
Radcom Ltd makes software that helps mobile network operators monitor and troubleshoot their networks. Its main products collect data from voice, text, and data traffic, then turn that information into alerts and reports so carriers can spot service problems, measure call quality, and find the source of outages faster. The company sells mainly to telecom operators and network service providers who need to keep large wireless and IP networks running reliably.
Radcom usually earns money by licensing its software and selling related support, maintenance, and subscription-style services. Customers use its systems as part of network operations, so the business sits in the telecom infrastructure layer rather than in consumer phones or carrier services. That makes Radcom different from many software vendors because its tools are tied to the day-to-day health of mission-critical communications networks.
The company’s role is to help carriers improve service quality, reduce downtime, and manage the growing complexity of 4G, 5G, and packet-based networks. In practice, Radcom gives network teams a way to see what is happening inside the network and fix issues before customers notice them. Its business depends on long-term relationships with telecom operators that need specialized assurance software, not on mass-market software sales.
Revenue: RADCOM started 2026 with revenue of $18.6 million, up 12% year over year, and management said the business kept building on its recent momentum.
Profitability: Operating margin improved to 20.1% from 19.0% a year ago, helped by disciplined spending even as the company increased R&D.
Guidance: Management reaffirmed full-year 2026 revenue growth guidance of 8% to 12%.
AI Strategy: The company launched RADCOM Neura and new ServiceNow connectors, positioning AI as a bigger part of the product and go-to-market strategy.
Pipeline: Management said several Tier 1 opportunities are moving through technical evaluations and proof-of-concepts, with some new revenue expected in the second half of 2026 and more likely by Q4.
Partnerships: RADCOM highlighted joint work with ServiceNow, AWS, NVIDIA, Infosys and others as a way to widen reach and shorten sales cycles.