Draft:Totogi

  • Comment: The key thing needed is corporate depth. See WP:SIRS and then look at WP:CORPRTRIV. The sources here fall into that second category. Very few companies of this size will get over the notability requirement short of several in depth profiles in the financial press. ChrysGalley (talk) 10:33, 31 March 2026 (UTC)
  • Comment: In accordance with the Wikimedia Foundation's Terms of Use, I disclose that I have been paid by my employer for my contributions to this article. TechAnalyst2025 (talk) 08:02, 15 September 2025 (UTC)

Totogi is a telecommunications software company founded in 2021.[1][2] It initially focused on cloud-based charging software for communications service providers, delivered through Amazon Web Services.[1][2] Later coverage described the company more broadly in business support systems and, by 2025 and 2026, in AI and ontology-based telecom software.[3][4][5]

History

Totogi was launched publicly at Mobile World Congress 2021 after TelcoDR founder Danielle Rios, then known as Danielle Royston, invested US$100 million in the company.[6] Early coverage tied the launch to Rios's wider campaign for public cloud adoption in telecom.[6][7] In the run-up to the event, after Ericsson withdrew from MWC Barcelona because of pandemic concerns, Rios took over Ericsson's vacated exhibition space and turned it into Cloud City, a public-cloud showcase for the telecom industry.[8][9] Mobile World Live and Computer Weekly described Totogi's MWC debut as part of that wider push, while Computer Weekly wrote that the company was trying to do for telco software what Salesforce had done for CRM.[1][7]

In 2022, Totogi moved from launch to commercial rollout. TelecomTV wrote that its charging software had become available in all 26 AWS regions and that the company already had paying customers.[2] Around the same time, Light Reading described Totogi as an early step in Rios's broader effort to expand from charging software into a wider public-cloud telecom software stack.[10]

Subsequent coverage focused on deployments: In 2024, Zain Sudan moved to Totogi's charging-as-a-service platform after the ongoing armed conflict in Sudan resulted in a near-total blackout of internet and telecommunications services.[11] According to Access Now, Sudan's nationwide internet shutdown began on February 2, 2024, after reports that the Rapid Support Forces had seized control of ISP data centers in Khartoum.[12] Light Reading said Totogi's Zain deal likely came at Ericsson's expense, though it also noted that the exact scope of the replacement was unclear; the publication said the migration took 18 days and covered about 20 million subscribers.[11] In 2025, Light Reading reported that New Zealand operator 2degrees was using Totogi's platform for its wholesale MVNO business.[3]

By 2025, some trade and analyst coverage was describing Totogi in terms broader than charging. Light Reading said BSS Magic could run on top of other BSS platforms to generate insights and AI workloads, while a separate Light Reading report from MWC 2025 said the company had introduced an AI system designed to generate insights from different telecom systems.[3][13] In March 2026, Telecoms.com described Totogi Ontology as an executable knowledge layer that sits above BSS, OSS, and network systems.[4] In separate MWC26 analysis, Appledore Research argued that the real momentum in AI-era telecom software was in data fabrics, ontologies, semantic models, and other foundational layers.[5]

  1. ^ a b c Majithia, Kavit (2021-06-28). "Public cloud start-up Totogi lifts off at MWC21". Mobile World Live.
  2. ^ a b c Le Maistre, Ray (2022-05-24). "Telco software startup Totogi launches worldwide on AWS". TelecomTV.
  3. ^ a b c Krásová, Tereza (2025-06-30). "Totogi flaunts charging deal progress with NZ's 2degrees". Light Reading.
  4. ^ a b Wooden, Andrew (2026-03-11). "Totogi: 'Building AI that really works at scale is not a weekend project'". Telecoms.com.
  5. ^ a b Abraham, John (2026-03-19). "MWC26: BSS Takeaways". Appledore Research.
  6. ^ a b Springham, Justin (2021-05-26). "TelcoDR invests $100M in public cloud start-up Totogi". Mobile World Live.
  7. ^ a b O'Halloran, Joe (2021-06-29). "MWC 2021: Totogi aims to 'do for telcos what Salesforce did for CRM'". Computer Weekly.
  8. ^ Hardesty, Linda (2021-03-12). "Consultant buys Ericsson's MWC floorspace to host 'cloud city'". Fierce Network.
  9. ^ Springham, Justin (2021-04-28). "TelcoDR MWC21 Cloud City gets first airing". Mobile World Live.
  10. ^ Morris, Iain (2022-05-31). "After Totogi, Royston wants to cloudify the entire telco stack". Light Reading.
  11. ^ a b Krásová, Tereza (2024-04-18). "Totogi lands BSS deal with Zain Sudan – at Ericsson's likely expense". Light Reading.
  12. ^ "#KeepItOn in times of war: Sudan's communications shutdown must be reversed urgently". Access Now. 2024-02-09.
  13. ^ Krásová, Tereza (2025-03-27). "Agentic AI is on a mission to infiltrate telecom". Light Reading.

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