For much of the past decade, many of the most ambitious ideas in artificial intelligence lived primarily in research papers, labs, and long-term roadmaps. Agentic AI was no exception. The concept of AI systems capable of reasoning, planning, and acting autonomously was widely discussed but largely theoretical. But earlier this month, Gartner® released its report The Future of NetOps Is Agentic, reflecting a growing consensus that this has changed. What was once conceptual is now becoming operational.
We have reached an inflection point where AI research is being translated into real-world systems, and nowhere is this more evident than in network operations. Across IT operations, and especially in NetOps, the conversation is shifting from how AI analyzes data to how AI takes action. This marks a fundamental break from decades of human-centered workflows that simply cannot scale with the speed, complexity, and interdependence of modern networks.
For the first time in the history of NetOps, teams are beginning to explore an entirely new “art of the possible.” AI is no longer confined to dashboards, recommendations, or post-incident analysis. Instead, intelligent systems can continuously observe live environments, reason across domains, and act on behalf of operators in near real time. This marks a redefinition of how network operations function.
This week, we are exploring what Agentic AI means for network operations, why it matters now, and what must be in place for it to succeed.
Transitioning from AIOps to Agentic Operations
For a number of years now, AIOps platforms (now called Event Intelligence Solutions by Gartner) have focused on applying AI to one of the hardest problems in IT operations: making sense of overwhelming volumes of events and signals. Solutions like Selector have delivered real, measurable value, reducing noise, accelerating root cause analysis, and improving mean time to resolution through event correlation and contextual enrichment.
However, AIOps was never designed to deliver full autonomy. By nature, it relies on AI models for optimized pattern detection, inference, and recommendation, with humans remaining responsible for decision-making and action. The fact that AIOps stops short of full autonomy is not a shortcoming but rather a reflection of the maturity of the AI technologies and operational modes available when these platforms emerged.
Agentic NetOps represents the next logical evolutionary step, made possible only now as advances in AI architectures, reasoning systems, and operational guardrails begin to close the gap between insight and action. The 2025 Gartner® Market Guide for Event Intelligence Solutions reframes this evolution by focusing on event intelligence as the foundation for automation and decision-making. According to Gartner:
“Event intelligence solutions apply AI to augment, accelerate, and automate responses to signals detected from digital services.”
The framing around this is critical, and our take is that AI must first understand before it can act. That understanding requires unified events, cross-domain context, and causal reasoning — all of which are capabilities that must precede any form of safe autonomy.
Gartner’s 2026 research report, The Future of NetOps is Agentic, highlights this natural progression: response-focused AI (simple AI chatbots) gives way to task-focused AI (AI assistants), which finally evolves into goal-focused AI (Network AI agents). In other words, Event Intelligence (formerly known generally as AIOps) lays the foundation. Agentic AI then builds on that foundation to introduce systems to go beyond recommending actions and instead continuously reason about the environment and execute on behalf of operators.
What makes AI “Agentic” in NetOps?
Agentic AI differs fundamentally from chatbots or task-based assistants. Rather than responding to prompts or executing predefined workflows, agentic systems operate with:
- Goals (e.g., maintain performance, prevent outages)
- Context (topology, dependencies, history, policy)
- Reasoning (causal analysis, probability, trade-offs)
- Action (automated or human-approved execution)
In practical terms, this means AI agents can monitor live networks, detect emerging issues, investigate root cause across domains, and initiate remediation — often faster and at greater scale than human teams.
Gartner notes that generative AI is accelerating this shift by enabling natural language interaction and deeper contextual reasoning:
“EIS vendors have moved quickly to implement large language model (LLM)- and GenAI-based capabilities…These capabilities will increasingly be enhanced with retrieval-augmented generation (RAG) or fine-tuning to provide improved context and reduce the risk of hallucinations and inaccurate findings.”
Gartner also asserts that:
“The next evolution of these capabilities promises to deliver even more specialized and sophisticated agentic models targeting broader aspects of the event response and remediation process with expectations being set once again toward fully automated remediation.”
Why Agentic AI is inevitable for network operations
Modern networks are no longer static infrastructures. They are dynamic systems spanning cloud, data center, edge, and SaaS, producing massive volumes of telemetry and events every second. Human-centered operations models simply cannot keep pace.
Gartner highlights the operational pressure facing I&O teams:
“Many IT operations teams fail to realize the full potential of event intelligence solutions, realizing a limited value beyond event correlation and noise reduction.”
At Selector, we believe the next leap forward comes from closing the gap between insight and action. Agentic AI enables:
- Continuous, real-time investigation without human fatigue
- Faster containment and remediation of incidents
- Proactive identification of weak signals before impact
- A shift in human roles from operators to supervisors and strategists
In this model, humans are no longer “in the loop” for every decision, but remain firmly “on the loop”, defining intent, guardrails, and trust boundaries.
The Prerequisites for Agentic NetOps
Agentic AI cannot be bolted onto fragmented tooling or poor data. Gartner repeatedly emphasizes that value depends on data quality, process maturity, and organizational readiness:
“The efficacy of event intelligence solutions is directly related to the sources and quality of data available for ingestion and analysis.”
From our perspective, successful agentic operations require:
- Unified event intelligence across network, infrastructure, and applications
- Causal and topological context, not just statistical correlation
- Explainability and auditability to build trust in autonomous decisions
- Clear governance and guardrails for automated action
- Incremental adoption, starting with human-approved workflows
Without these foundations, autonomy increases risk rather than reducing it.
Selector’s Perspective: Agentic AI as a Capability, Not a Feature
One of the biggest risks in the current market is superficial “agent washing”, where vendors rebrand chat interfaces or scripts as autonomous intelligence. Gartner warns against this hype-driven approach, noting that AI must be evaluated by its use cases and outcomes, not by terminology.
Selector views Agentic AI not as a single feature, but as a capability that emerges from mature event intelligence. When AI has access to high-fidelity signals, rich context, and causal reasoning, agentic behavior becomes both possible and safe.
This is why Selector has long focused on unifying events, topology, and intelligence across domains. Agentic AI is not the starting point; it is the natural outcome of doing the fundamentals right.
Looking Ahead
Agentic AI will redefine how network operations teams scale, collaborate, and deliver reliability. Over time, fleets of specialized agents will work alongside human operators, handling investigation, coordination, and remediation at machine speed, while humans focus on intent, architecture, and strategy.
As Gartner notes, expectations around autonomy are rising once again, but this time, the foundations are finally in place:
“Increasingly sophisticated AI models… promise better aspects of event response and remediation, with expectations being set once again toward fully automated remediation.”
At Selector, we believe the future of NetOps is not dashboard-driven, ticket-driven, or even AI-assisted — it is agentic. And the organizations that invest now in event intelligence, trust, and governance will be best positioned to lead that future.
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