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Move & Connect taps KORE’s eSIM platform to streamline multi-country IoT rollouts across Europe

By Marc Kavinsky, Lead Editor at IoT Business News.

French connectivity specialist Move & Connect has struck an alliance with KORE to give European IoT operators a single-contract, API-managed way to run deployments across borders—an approach aimed at reducing operational friction in use cases where downtime is costly.

For years, pan-European IoT deployments have been less a technical challenge than an operational one. Devices can be designed to work anywhere, but the commercial and carrier realities of Europe—different operator relationships, varying coverage footprints, and inconsistent tools for monitoring fleets—often turn “multi-country” into a patchwork of contracts and management portals. That fragmentation becomes more than an inconvenience in critical infrastructure scenarios, where a connectivity issue can translate directly into service interruption and lost revenue.

Against that backdrop, Move & Connect and KORE Group Holdings have announced a strategic alliance intended to simplify how European businesses deploy and run cellular IoT across borders. The agreement pairs Move & Connect’s on-the-ground market and deployment expertise with KORE’s global connectivity footprint and connectivity management platform, including eSIM capabilities.

The core promise is straightforward: Move & Connect’s European customers gain access to KORE connectivity in more than 190 countries, with service managed through a single contract and API. In practical terms, that positions the two companies to act as a single operational interface for device fleets that routinely move across national boundaries—or for businesses scaling the same device type across multiple European markets.

Why this is more than another roaming deal

Partnership announcements between connectivity providers are common, and many boil down to “more coverage” messaging. What stands out here is the explicit emphasis on operational control via KORE’s platform and APIs, and on Move & Connect using that control to deliver managed services tailored to regional realities. That hints at a division of labor increasingly seen in mature IoT deployments: a global connectivity layer that is programmatically controlled, and a specialist provider that turns that control into day-to-day operational outcomes for specific verticals and geographies.

In the press release, the companies point to critical sectors including EV charging, retail and smart farming. These are not incidental examples. They are environments where distributed assets and field operations make troubleshooting expensive, and where service-level expectations are rising. The stated goal is to avoid the “unreliable connectivity and lack of unified visibility” that can emerge when fleets span multiple countries and multiple mobile network operators.

A concrete implication—without assuming unannounced product capabilities—is that a single contract plus API-based management can reduce the time it takes to onboard new countries or adjust connectivity policies across an installed base. For OEMs and enterprises, that can shift effort away from carrier-by-carrier negotiations and manual fleet administration toward repeatable rollout playbooks.

eSIM as an operating model, not a feature

KORE’s platform is described as including “extensive eSIM capabilities,” and the alliance is framed around lifecycle management rather than one-off SIM supply. That matters because eSIM in IoT is increasingly about maintaining control after deployment: managing profiles, standardizing provisioning processes, and enabling organizations to scale without rebuilding operational tooling every time they enter a new market.

This is where Move & Connect’s positioning becomes distinct. The company is not presenting itself as a pure connectivity reseller; it is emphasizing hands-on deployment knowledge—understanding device behavior and local geographies—and using KORE’s infrastructure to deliver an “enterprise-grade” service with local responsiveness. For system integrators, that combination can be attractive when customers want a single accountable partner but still need local expertise for rollout realities such as site readiness, device placement, and operational troubleshooting across dispersed estates.

An analytics layer on top of network data

Move & Connect also says it is developing a proprietary AI-powered analytics layer “on top of KORE’s network data.” While details are not disclosed, the intent is clear: to move up the stack from connectivity delivery into insights derived from connectivity operations.

One non-obvious takeaway for IoT professionals is what that suggests about the competitive battleground in managed connectivity. Connectivity management platforms have long provided visibility and control, but service providers are increasingly looking to differentiate with additional intelligence that can translate network and SIM telemetry into operational signals for customers. If Move & Connect succeeds, it strengthens the role of regional specialists as more than intermediaries—potentially becoming the operational analytics interface customers interact with daily, while the global provider remains the underlying connectivity and management substrate.

What it means for buyers and partners

For enterprises running multi-country deployments, the alliance is a reminder to evaluate connectivity not just on coverage maps, but on the management model: whether fleets can be governed through a single API and contract, and whether escalation paths and local expertise exist when deployments hit real-world issues.

For OEMs, the combination of a global platform and a European connectivity specialist may simplify commercialization in multiple countries, particularly when devices are expected to be installed and managed at scale by third parties. And for connectivity providers and integrators, the announcement underscores a broader trend: value is increasingly created at the operational layer—lifecycle management, programmatic control, and analytics—rather than in raw connectivity alone.

The post Move & Connect taps KORE’s eSIM platform to streamline multi-country IoT rollouts across Europe appeared first on IoT Business News.

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