ICANN85 in Mumbai: Why Internet Governance Is Becoming a CX Imperative for Digital Leaders
Ever tried resolving a customer issue that spiraled across regions, languages, and platforms—only to discover the problem wasn’t your product, but the Internet layer beneath it?
A fintech app fails in one geography.
A global brand’s site loads slowly in local languages.
An AI chatbot misunderstands users because scripts don’t render consistently.
These moments feel like CX failures.
In reality, they often trace back to how the Internet itself is governed, named, and scaled.
That’s why ICANN85, happening in Mumbai from 7–12 March 2026, matters far beyond policy circles. Hosted by NIXI under MeitY, the meeting lands at a pivotal moment for CX, EX, and digital trust leaders worldwide.
This isn’t just about domain names.
It’s about experience continuity in a fragmented digital world.
ICANN85 is ICANN’s 85th Public Meeting, where global stakeholders shape how the Internet remains stable, secure, and interoperable.
For CX teams, ICANN decisions influence discoverability, language access, digital trust, and journey reliability across markets.
ICANN coordinates the Internet’s unique identifiers.
That includes domain names, IP addresses, and protocols customers never see—but always experience.
When these systems fracture, customer journeys fracture too.
India’s role as host signals a shift toward experience-led Internet scale, not just infrastructure growth.
India now has over one billion Internet users, many accessing services in non-English scripts, mobile-first contexts, and low-bandwidth environments.
This mirrors the challenges CX leaders face globally:
Hosting ICANN85 in Mumbai places real-world user complexity at the center of Internet governance.
As Shri S. Krishnan, IAS, Secretary, MeitY and Chairman of NIXI, noted, India’s digital transformation depends on an open, inclusive, and resilient Internet.
For CX, that translates into designing for diversity, not averages.
Internet governance determines whether digital experiences scale smoothly or break silently.
CX teams often optimize the visible layers:
Yet the invisible layer—the DNS and naming system—defines:
A misaligned domain strategy can undo years of CX investment.
The New gTLD Program allows organizations to apply for customized top-level domains aligned to brand, culture, or community.
Launching in April 2026, this round follows ICANN85 immediately.
For CX leaders, this opens new possibilities:
Imagine:
.care for healthcare journeys.bank reinforcing trust in BFSIDomains stop being addresses.
They become experience cues.
Custom gTLDs reduce dependency on fragmented platforms and third-party trust layers.
CX teams gain:
For EX teams, this simplifies:
Less friction.
More confidence.
A multilingual Internet allows users to engage fully in their native language and script—not just consume translated content.
ICANN85 places heavy emphasis on multilingualism, aligning with India’s .भारत domain and global inclusion goals.
For CX, this shifts priorities:
Chatbots trained only in English fail silently in local contexts.
Voice interfaces misinterpret intent.
Search relevance drops.
Governance decisions upstream affect emotional resonance downstream.
The multistakeholder model ensures governments, businesses, civil society, and technical experts co-create Internet policy.
This model mirrors modern CX operating models:
ICANN85 reinforces that no single entity owns the Internet experience.
For CX leaders, this validates ecosystem thinking:
Experience leadership now requires external alignment, not just internal excellence.
WSIS+20 reaffirmed the Internet as a shared global resource governed through multistakeholder collaboration.
Adopted in December 2025, it reinforced:
This matters because:
ICANN85 is the first public meeting after WSIS+20.
Momentum matters.
For CX leaders, this creates predictability—a rare asset in volatile digital markets.
These blind spots surface as:
The fix isn’t better UX alone.
It’s better infrastructure empathy.
This model connects Internet governance to frontline experience outcomes.
Domains, naming, authenticity signals
Language, script, bandwidth sensitivity
Resolution speed, stability, consistency
Security perception, phishing resistance
Journeys, emotion, loyalty
Most CX teams start at Layer 5.
Leaders work top-down and bottom-up.
The ICANN Community Excellence Award celebrates consensus-building and sustained contribution.
This signals a cultural truth:
For EX leaders, this reinforces:
Strong CX cultures mirror strong governance cultures.
Across CXQuest’s coverage of AI governance, trust-led CX, and digital resilience, three patterns stand out:
ICANN85 accelerates all three.
Ignoring these signals risks experience fragility.
ICANN manages Internet identifiers that influence accessibility, trust, and reliability across digital journeys.
Because infrastructure failures surface as experience failures customers blame on brands.
It enables clearer brand identity, localized journeys, and stronger trust signals.
AI systems rely on consistent scripts and naming standards to understand intent accurately.
No. Any organization serving multilingual or cross-border users is affected.
The future of CX won’t be won only in design labs or dashboards.
It will be shaped in rooms like ICANN85 in Mumbai, where the Internet itself is being reimagined.
For CX leaders, the message is clear:
If you don’t engage with how the Internet works, your customers will show you where it breaks.
The post ICANN85 in Mumbai: Why Internet Governance Now Shapes CX Strategy appeared first on CX Quest.

