ServiceNow has an almost antiquated quality. ServiceNow has been quietly transforming enterprise plumbing into one of the most reliable growth stories on the New York Stock Exchange for years, while the noisier names of the AI era continue to make headlines.
A ServiceNow dashboard will probably be glowing on someone’s second monitor if you stroll through any corporate IT floor in New Jersey, London, or Frankfurt. The software isn’t flashy. However, it is effective. Wall Street has gradually become aware of this.
| Company Snapshot | Details |
|---|---|
| Company Name | ServiceNow, Inc. |
| Founder | Fred Luddy |
| Founded | 2003, Santa Clara, California |
| Headquarters | Santa Clara, California |
| CEO | Bill McDermott |
| President & CFO | Gina Mastantuono |
| Stock Exchange | New York Stock Exchange (Ticker: NOW) |
| Index Membership | S&P 100, S&P 500, Fortune 500 |
| 2024 Annual Revenue | Crossed $10 billion |
| Estimated Employees | Around 23,000 (as of Dec 2023) |
| Key 2026 Partnerships | Anthropic and OpenAI for agentic AI integration |
| UK Investment Commitment | $1.5 billion, announced Oct 2024 |
The Santa Clara-based company that started out as Glidesoft in 2003 with just one employee has grown into a $10 billion enterprise annually. The founder, Fred Luddy, had left Peregrine Systems with an idea that at the time seemed almost unyielding: recreate what Peregrine provided, but do it on the cloud. There’s a feeling that Luddy never thought the business would be included in the Fortune 500. And yet here it is, comfortably positioned within the S&P 100, with a stock chart that has irritated short sellers for more than ten years.
Investors appear to think that AI—rather than the speculative kind—will drive the next phase of growth. In order to develop agentic AI features, ServiceNow announced in January 2026 that it would be integrating Anthropic’s and OpenAI’s large language models into its current platform. It’s a subtly hostile action. Suddenly, the 2023 Nvidia partnership that incorporated AI services into corporate help desks appears to be a warm-up act. Although the initial results from enterprise pilots have been more than encouraging, it is still unclear whether these deals will result in significant margin expansion.

ServiceNow has changed under Bill McDermott, who joined from SAP at the end of 2019. In the traditional, almost theatrical sense, McDermott is a salesman. He discusses workflows in the same way that certain executives discuss moonshots. After being appointed President in 2025 while still serving as CFO, Gina Mastantuono led the financial engine through an exceptionally stable period, increasing subscription revenue at a compound annual growth rate of 26% between 2020 and 2024. In software, that level of consistency is uncommon. In a market that has occasionally panicked over cloud spending, AI bubbles, and rising interest rates, it is even less common.
The stock is not inexpensive. Seldom has it been. One argument is that ServiceNow’s premium pricing is a result of its loyal customers. The cost of switching is extremely high once a Fortune 500 company has rebuilt its IT, HR, and customer service workflows on the platform. Retention figures that the majority of SaaS companies would frame and display on a wall demonstrate this stickiness. However, the valuation raises doubts. A mistake in the implementation of AI or a slowdown in corporate spending could quickly undermine trust.
It’s difficult to ignore the similarities between ServiceNow’s story and that of previous software behemoths. Oracle in the late 1990s. Salesforce ten years later. Critics claimed that the multiple was unsustainable, that the growth could not continue, and that they would be exposed during the next downturn. For the most part, each continued to compound. It’s unclear if ServiceNow will follow in that tradition or falter due to its own demands. For the time being, the stock continues to do what it has been doing in silence for fourteen years, the platform continues to function, and customers continue to renew.
