ServiceNow Now Assist
ServiceNow’s generative-AI assistant family embedded across the Now Platform — Now Assist for IT Service Management, Customer Service Management, HR Service Delivery, Field Service, Creator and Security Operations — multi-model under the hood (Anthropic Claude, OpenAI, NVIDIA Apriel / Nemotron, plus ServiceNow’s own domain-tuned models) and sold inside Pro Plus and Enterprise Plus SKUs into the existing ServiceNow enterprise account base.
The Business
ServiceNow Now Assist is ServiceNow’s generative-AI assistant family — embedded across the Now Platform’s workflow surfaces: IT Service Management, Customer Service Management, HR Service Delivery, Field Service Management, Creator (low-code app development) and Security Operations. Now Assist launched in late 2023 alongside the Vancouver release and has since expanded with a multi-model foundation stack (Anthropic Claude, OpenAI, NVIDIA Apriel and Nemotron, and ServiceNow’s own domain-tuned models trained on customer-permissioned workflow data), agent orchestration, the RaptorDB data layer for grounding, and Now Assist Skills for vertical use cases. The strategic positioning differs from frontier-model labs and from productivity-suite-anchored assistants: Now Assist is sold to enterprise IT, customer-service, HR and security buyers as a workflow-schema-embedded generative layer inside the Now Platform subscription, distributed through ServiceNow’s existing direct, partner and reseller account channels. Now Assist is a product family inside ServiceNow Inc. — not a separate company or a standalone P&L — and the relevant financial frame is ServiceNow subscription revenue with Now Assist ACV trajectory noted on earnings calls.
Customers and Distribution
ServiceNow reported Q1 2026 subscription revenue of $3.67B (+22% YoY, +19% constant currency) with 16 transactions greater than $5M net-new ACV in the quarter (up roughly 80% YoY), 630 customers above $5M ACV (+22% YoY), Now Assist $1M+ customers up 130% YoY and deals with 3+ Now Assist products up 70% YoY. Now Assist itself is tracking to $1.5B 2026 ACV — raised from a prior $1B target — against the broader $30B-by-2030 ServiceNow revenue framing introduced on the same call. The Now Platform install base is approximately 8,400+ enterprise customers, weighted to large-enterprise IT operations, customer-service and HR. Distribution sits across three motions inside ServiceNow’s mature enterprise GTM: direct enterprise sales into the Now Platform account base (the principal channel), partnerships with the global systems-integrator ecosystem (Accenture, Deloitte, EY, KPMG and the regional SI bench), and the reseller and ISV partner network around Now Platform extensibility. The P3c GTM-maturity sub-rubric was upgraded from 9 to 10 in the v1.6 evidence pass on the Q1 2026 deal-mix evidence — best-in-class enterprise GTM machine, in the auditor’s wording.
Model Strategy
Now Assist is a Verticals-first generative-AI play: ServiceNow’s strategic bet is that schema-grounded, workflow-embedded AI inside the Now Platform — paired with the IT-operations install base no rival workflow platform can match — beats generalist assistant access inside regulated ITSM, CSM, HR Service Delivery and Security Operations procurement. The foundation-model stack is deliberately multi-supplier: Anthropic Claude, OpenAI, NVIDIA Apriel and Nemotron, plus ServiceNow’s own domain-tuned models trained on workflow data. The D4a supplier-diversity sub-rubric was held at 9 in the v1.6 evidence pass on that basis — the highest defensibility credit Now Assist receives. Above the foundation-model layer, Now Assist Agents and the RaptorDB grounding layer are the orchestration surface; the Pro Plus and Enterprise Plus SKUs are the monetisation surface; the workflow-schema integration across CMDB, incident, change, request, case, knowledge, HR case and Security Operations records is the structural differentiator. Output and agent-definition portability are constrained by the Now Platform schema (the D1c portability sub-rubric was held at 7 on that evidence) — the same workflow-platform lock-in that has historically anchored ServiceNow’s subscription gross retention.
Leadership Team
Now Assist is a product family inside ServiceNow Inc. rather than a separate company — the IM Framework v1.5-A8 segment rule applies and ServiceNow-segment leadership is in scope here. Bench depth is via ServiceNow’s wider engineering, sales and operations organisation (~26,000 employees globally per the most recent 10-K disclosure); the D4e sub-rubric was held at 6 reflecting Bill McDermott’s continued personal load-bearing role on AI narrative. Other publicly active senior figures include Pat Casey (CTO and EVP of DevOps), Jon Sigler (SVP of Now Platform) and the Now Assist product-line GMs who own individual workflow surfaces (ITSM, CSM, HR, Security Operations, Creator).
Funding History
| Date | Round | Raised | Post-money | Lead investor(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| n/a | Internal funding | n/a | n/a | ServiceNow Inc. (NYSE: NOW) |
ServiceNow Now Assist is not externally funded. It is a product family within ServiceNow Inc., funded from parent cash flow. ServiceNow reported Q1 2026 subscription revenue of $3.67B (+22% YoY, +19% constant currency) with current remaining performance obligations (cRPO) growth and a record renewal-rate disclosure consistent with prior quarters. Now Assist itself is tracking to $1.5B 2026 ACV (raised from a prior $1B target); the latest disclosed ACV mark referenced in third-party financial coverage is approximately $750M. No external rounds exist for Now Assist as a standalone entity.
Competitive Landscape
Now Assist’s competitive set sits in three concentric rings: the symmetric workflow-platform plays that mirror ServiceNow’s positioning on adjacent surfaces (Salesforce Agentforce on CRM, SAP Joule and Oracle Fusion AI Agents on ERP), the productivity-suite-anchored generative AI with cross-workflow extensibility (Microsoft 365 Copilot with Copilot Studio), and the developer-and-knowledge-work-anchored agents (Atlassian Rovo). ServiceNow is unusual in the set because the competitive frame is workflow-platform depth rather than horizontal model capability — the strategic bet is that schema-grounded, workflow-embedded AI inside the Now Platform beats generalist assistant access in regulated ITSM, CSM, HR and Security Operations procurement.
| Competitor | Positioning | Distribution edge | Threat profile |
|---|---|---|---|
| Agentforce (Salesforce (NYSE: CRM)) |
Salesforce’s agentic AI layer across Sales Cloud, Service Cloud, Marketing Cloud, Commerce Cloud and the Data Cloud — the closest direct mirror of Now Assist’s workflow-platform-embedded positioning, but anchored in CRM rather than ITSM. | Salesforce enterprise account base; AppExchange channel; Slack distribution; Data Cloud integration as the customer-data backbone for agent grounding. | High — structurally symmetric play on a workflow platform of comparable enterprise scale; the principal head-to-head in enterprise procurement where customer-service and field-service workflows overlap. |
| Microsoft 365 Copilot (Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT)) |
Productivity-suite-embedded generative AI (Word, Excel, Outlook, Teams, PowerPoint) with Copilot Studio extensibility into line-of-business workflows including ITSM-adjacent surfaces. The Microsoft Graph data tie-in is the structural differentiator. | Microsoft 365 enterprise install base (the world’s largest productivity-suite distribution channel); Azure account base; Copilot Studio low-code extensibility. | High — Microsoft’s distribution reach materially exceeds ServiceNow’s; the open question is whether Copilot Studio extensions credibly substitute for Now Platform workflow depth in regulated ITSM and CSM procurement. |
| Rovo (Atlassian (NASDAQ: TEAM)) |
Atlassian’s enterprise-search-and-agent layer across Jira, Confluence and the Atlassian platform — the developer-and-knowledge-work-anchored counterpart to Now Assist’s IT-operations anchor. | Atlassian Cloud account base; Jira Service Management as the ITSM-adjacent surface; developer-led bottom-up adoption motion that contrasts with ServiceNow’s top-down enterprise sale. | Medium — narrower than Now Assist on regulated enterprise ITSM, but credible in the Jira-anchored mid-market and in developer-led knowledge-work flanking lanes. |
| Joule (SAP (NYSE: SAP)) |
SAP’s generative-AI assistant across S/4HANA, SuccessFactors, Ariba and the SAP Business Technology Platform — the ERP-anchored counterpart to Now Assist’s ITSM / CSM / HR anchor. | SAP enterprise install base; BTP partner ecosystem; SuccessFactors HR distribution as the HR-workflow overlap with Now Assist. | Medium — ERP-anchored rather than ITSM-anchored, but a credible workflow-platform competitor where finance, procurement and HR cases overlap. |
| Oracle Fusion AI Agents (Oracle (NYSE: ORCL)) |
Oracle’s AI agent layer across Fusion ERP, HCM and CX — the second ERP-anchored counterpart, with Oracle Cloud Infrastructure as the supplier-side advantage on inference economics. | Oracle enterprise install base; OCI account base; vertical industry suites (healthcare, public sector, retail). | Medium — ERP-anchored with a strong infrastructure-side cost story, but limited overlap with the ITSM and CSM workflows where Now Assist is most defended. |
Pricing benchmark: Now Assist is sold inside ServiceNow’s Pro Plus and Enterprise Plus SKUs as a per-user premium on the underlying ITSM, CSM, HR or Security Operations subscription — not a separate per-call generative-credit model. Agentforce, Copilot, Rovo and Joule are layered onto their own parent-platform subscriptions on a comparable seat-plus-consumption structure, with consumption-credit pricing more prominent in the Salesforce and Microsoft cases. The competitive frame is therefore enterprise procurement and workflow depth rather than headline per-token price; ServiceNow’s structural differentiator is Now Platform schema lock-in and the IT-operations install base.
Potential Risks
The case for ServiceNow Now Assist at IM Framework 7.97 rests on the Now Platform install base (8,400+ enterprise customers, 630 above $5M ACV, 16 transactions above $5M net-new ACV in Q1 2026 alone), the multi-model supplier-diversity position, ServiceNow’s self-funded balance sheet at $3.67B Q1 2026 subscription revenue, and the $1.5B 2026 Now Assist ACV trajectory raised from a prior $1B target. The case against splits into five risks of differing magnitude — with the workflow-platform competitive cadence the most active, the partial Now Assist revenue disclosure the most structural, and the segment-of-conglomerate framing the most methodologically deliberate framing constraint.
Portability and substitutability — Now Platform schema lock-in
Now Assist outputs and agent actions sit inside the Now Platform’s workflow schema — CMDB, incident, change, request, case, knowledge, HR case and Security Operations data models. The underlying foundation models (Anthropic Claude, OpenAI, NVIDIA Apriel / Nemotron, ServiceNow’s own domain-tuned models) are portable in principle, but the schema-embedded agent definitions, workflow triggers, and approval flows are not portable to a rival workflow platform without re-implementation. The D1c portability sub-rubric was held at 7 in the v1.6 evidence pass on that basis. The bull case is that this is the same workflow-platform lock-in that has defined ServiceNow’s subscription gross-retention since IPO — a feature, not a bug. The bear case is that customers who price the Now Platform lock-in into renewal calculus may also negotiate harder on the Pro Plus / Enterprise Plus AI premium.
Segment-of-conglomerate framing — v1.5-A8 / A9 disciplines
Per the IM Framework v1.5-A8 segment rule, Now Assist is scored as an AI segment of ServiceNow Inc. and the segment’s own platform and revenue-path dynamics rather than parent-ServiceNow network effects flow through to defensibility. The A9 mix (D10/P90/E0/G0) gives a 0.928 factor on the D1 axis — small in magnitude but methodologically deliberate. The headline weighted mean (7.97) therefore explicitly understates what an unadjusted parent-ServiceNow view would show. This framing is not a knock on the underlying economics; it is a discipline against allowing parent strength to inflate a segment score. The investor takeaway: the headline score is the AI segment, not the parent.
Now Assist revenue disclosure is partial — ACV trajectory only
ServiceNow does not separately disclose Now Assist revenue on a clean GAAP segment basis. The closest published references are Now Assist ACV trajectory (tracking to $1.5B 2026 ACV, raised from a prior $1B target), the latest disclosed ACV mark of approximately $750M referenced in third-party financial coverage, and the Pro Plus / Enterprise Plus SKU commentary on earnings calls. ServiceNow’s total subscription revenue is the parent figure ($3.67B in Q1 2026, +22% YoY). The IM tracker labels the headline as “ServiceNow subscription revenue with Now Assist ACV trajectory noted” rather than a clean Now Assist GAAP figure; the P1d sub-rubric was upgraded from 8 to 9 reflecting the raised $1.5B 2026 target and the disclosed ACV trajectory even where the GAAP disclosure is bundled.
Foundation-model supplier interlock — multi-model dependency
Now Assist runs Anthropic Claude, OpenAI, NVIDIA Apriel and Nemotron and ServiceNow’s own domain-tuned models behind the Now Platform surface. The D4a supplier-diversity sub-rubric was held at 9 in the v1.6 evidence pass on that basis — the highest defensibility credit ServiceNow gets — but the structural exposure is that each supplier is also a potential competitor for the same enterprise inference workloads. Anthropic and OpenAI ship direct enterprise APIs; NVIDIA is the accelerator supplier behind most rival agent stacks. None of this is fatal to Now Assist, but it caps how durable the multi-model story is if any one of those labs prices the partnership economics down or competes more aggressively for the same enterprise budget.
Workflow-platform competitive cadence
Salesforce Agentforce, Microsoft 365 Copilot, SAP Joule and Atlassian Rovo all ship comparable workflow-agent capabilities on a quarterly cadence into adjacent enterprise install bases. Microsoft’s distribution reach materially exceeds ServiceNow’s at the productivity-suite layer; Salesforce’s reach materially exceeds ServiceNow’s at the CRM layer. The structural risk is not that any one rival beats Now Assist head-to-head inside ITSM, CSM or HR Service Delivery — the Now Platform install base and schema depth are durable — but that the workflow-platform competitive cadence compresses the Pro Plus / Enterprise Plus pricing premium and slows the $1.5B 2026 ACV trajectory.
Recent IM Coverage
Show recent press coverage of ServiceNow Now Assist
- Apr 2026 — ServiceNow Q1 2026 earnings: subscription revenue $3.67B (+22% YoY, +19% CC); 16 transactions >$5M net-new ACV; Now Assist $1M+ customers +130% YoY.
- Apr 2026 — ServiceNow Q1 earnings — Now Assist $1.5B 2026 ACV target raised from $1B; $30B 2030 revenue framing introduced.
- Apr 2026 — ServiceNow Inc. Form 8-K — Q1 FY2026 earnings release exhibit (ERQ1 2026).
- 2026 — ServiceNow Knowledge 2026 — Now Assist agent stack, RaptorDB and Now Platform AI roadmap.
- 2026 — ServiceNow — $30B revenue by 2030 trajectory analysis citing Now Assist ACV ramp.
- Jan 2026 — ServiceNow Q4 2025 earnings: full-year subscription revenue and Now Assist deal-count disclosures.
- 2025 — ServiceNow Form 10-K for fiscal year 2025 — full-year financial disclosures and Now Assist commentary.
- 2024 — ServiceNow launches Now Assist generative-AI portfolio — Pro Plus and Enterprise Plus SKU introduction.
Curated feed of named-source coverage — SEC filings (10-K, 10-Q, 8-K), ServiceNow’s own newsroom and investor releases, named-author tech and business press. Excludes paywalled article bodies of The Information, WSJ, FT and Bloomberg (headline + free-snippet only), wire-aggregator reposts and unsourced AI round-up pieces.
Show the source register for the figures on this page
IM operates a primary-source-where-possible discipline. The figures above come from:
- Revenue (basis-disclosure note): ServiceNow does not separately disclose Now Assist revenue on a clean GAAP basis. Closest published references: ServiceNow Q1 2026 results — subscription revenue $3.67B (+22% YoY, +19% constant currency); Now Assist tracking to $1.5B 2026 ACV (raised from a prior $1B target) per CIO Dive’s Q1 2026 coverage and the Q1 FY2026 8-K earnings release exhibit; latest disclosed ACV mark approximately $750M referenced in third-party financial coverage. We label the headline as “ServiceNow subscription revenue with Now Assist ACV trajectory noted” rather than a clean Now Assist-only GAAP figure and decline-to-publish a precise stand-alone Now Assist revenue number pending a primary segment disclosure.
- Customers and deal-mix: ServiceNow disclosed 16 transactions greater than $5M net-new ACV in Q1 2026 (up ~80% YoY), 630 customers with greater than $5M ACV (+22% YoY), Now Assist $1M+ customers +130% YoY, and deals with 3+ Now Assist products +70% YoY in the Q1 2026 earnings release. The 8,400+ enterprise customer-count is the standing reference for the Now Platform install base into which Now Assist is sold per ServiceNow’s investor materials and the FY2025 10-K.
- Headcount (basis-disclosure note): ServiceNow does not separately disclose Now Assist or AI-team headcount. ServiceNow Inc. group totals are reported on a fiscal-year basis in the 10-K at approximately 26,000 employees globally as of the most recent disclosure. We decline-to-publish a Now Assist-specific headcount and reference ServiceNow-wide totals only with the caveat that they are not Now Assist-specific.
- Funding to date: Not applicable. ServiceNow Now Assist is funded internally from ServiceNow Inc.’s balance sheet. Reference: ServiceNow Q1 2026 subscription revenue $3.67B (+22% YoY, +19% constant currency). ServiceNow Inc. is listed on NYSE as NOW and funds product development including Now Assist from operating cash flow rather than external rounds.
Methodology & Disclaimer
For metric definitions, source-tier hierarchy, and decline-to-publish rules, see the tracker methodology. Confidence dots (• green / • amber / • red) follow the same convention as the AI Tracker.
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Information Matters Framework scores are the considered opinion of the IM team — human and AI — applied to publicly-available evidence under a disclosed methodology. They are not statements of fact about the companies scored and they are not investment advice.
