Generative vs. Agentic: The Network Demands Your Team Isn’t Planning For
Generative vs. Agentic: The Network Demands Your Team Isn’t Planning For
Not all intelligent workloads hit your network the same way. Generative tools, the ones that respond to a prompt with text, an image, or a summary, create burst traffic. A user sends a query, the system responds, and the connection goes quiet. Agentic systems work differently. They run multi-step workflows autonomously, making decisions, calling APIs, and moving data across systems without waiting for a human to click anything. That’s sustained, unpredictable network load, and most infrastructure wasn’t built for it.
Why This Matters
The distinction between generative and agentic workloads isn’t academic, it’s operational. Organizations that treat all intelligent tools the same way will find their networks underprovisioned for the workloads that matter most. Agentic processes don’t pause between steps, and they don’t run on a predictable schedule. Common infrastructure gaps include:
- Networks designed for burst traffic that can’t sustain continuous autonomous workloads
- QoS policies that don’t differentiate between interactive and autonomous traffic
- Bandwidth planning based on human usage patterns that don’t account for machine-driven demand
- Limited visibility into how autonomous workflows consume network resources over time
The Opportunity for Business and IT Leaders
For IT leaders, understanding this distinction creates an opportunity to get ahead of infrastructure demands before they become performance problems. When organizations plan for both workload types, they build networks that support innovation rather than constrain it. A proactive approach enables organizations to:
- Assess current capacity against both burst and sustained workload profiles
- Implement traffic policies that prioritize critical autonomous processes
- Plan bandwidth growth around machine-driven demand, not just headcount
- Build infrastructure flexibility that adapts as workload profiles shift over time
How Organizations Can Plan for Both Workload Types
The organizations that move first on this will have a significant advantage. While others are troubleshooting performance issues after deployment, forward-thinking teams are building infrastructure that accommodates both traffic patterns from day one. A practical approach typically includes:
- Auditing current network utilization to identify where sustained workloads would create bottlenecks
- Modeling traffic profiles for autonomous workflows to project future bandwidth requirements
- Deploying SD-WAN and QoS configurations that handle diverse workload types simultaneously
- Establishing monitoring that tracks autonomous traffic separately from human-driven usage
Built for What’s Already Here
This isn’t a future problem. Organizations are already running autonomous workflows across their networks. The ones that planned their infrastructure for both workload types are the ones seeing performance and reliability today. The ones that didn’t are troubleshooting.












