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ServiceNow Otto creates the unified AI experience for the enterprise

Business

ServiceNow Otto creates the unified AI experience for the enterprise
Business

Business

ServiceNow Otto creates the unified AI experience for the enterprise

2026-05-06 00:58 Last Updated At:01:00

LAS VEGAS--(BUSINESS WIRE)--May 5, 2026--

Knowledge 2026 – Today, at ServiceNow’s annual customer and partner event, Knowledge 2026, ServiceNow (NYSE: NOW), the AI control tower for business reinvention, introduced ServiceNow Otto, a new AI experience that combines the intelligence of Now Assist, Moveworks, and AI Experience to complete work across every department and system. Employees, partners, and customers ask. ServiceNow Otto handles the rest.

This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20260505481484/en/

Enterprise AI has a completion problem. Other major software providers ship AI inside their own applications, working in compartmentalized isolation, unable to complete work across departments or systems. Large language models bring intelligence to the problem but don’t connect to a governed platform with the approval chains, permissions, audit trails, and cross-system workflows that enterprise work requires. The result: AI that answers questions but can’t finish the job. Employees still toggle between applications, chase approvals, and route their own requests. AI costs continue to rise, and productivity gains remain elusive.

ServiceNow Otto is built for exactly this gap. Rather than living inside a single application, ServiceNow Otto sits across the entire enterprise, understanding intent, routing work to the right agent, and executing it to completion. Employees, customers, and support teams talk, chat, search, browse, analyze, and build. ServiceNow Otto is designed to handle the rest, adapting to each employee’s role and location without requiring them to know which system handles their request. Actions are governed by AI Control Tower, which can log each AI interaction, enforce enterprise policies, and provide explainability for every decision.

“Moveworks understood what employees needed. ServiceNow could do the work. Together, we built ServiceNow Otto, an AI experience that completes work, across any system, department, or any workflow,” said Bhavin Shah, SVP and GM of Employee Experience and AI at ServiceNow. “Employees no longer need to know where to go or who to ask. They just ask ServiceNow Otto, and it can handle the rest within the guardrails the enterprise requires."

ServiceNow Otto handles requests to completion, across any department or system

ServiceNow Otto brings together multimodal interactions across every channel and autonomous orchestration for complex cross-system workflows through:

ServiceNow Otto is already at work across the platform, beginning with ServiceNow EmployeeWorks and AI‑driven experiences governed through AI Control Tower. ServiceNow EmployeeWorks is one of the first ways organizations experience ServiceNow Otto in action — using conversational AI to resolve work end to end. Just one month after launch, ServiceNow EmployeeWorks generated six deals exceeding $1 million each in net new annual contract value (NNACV), demonstrating that when AI is grounded in enterprise context and completes real work, people adopt it.

ServiceNow Otto provides a unified AI experience for engaging execution across systems and workflows. Actions are grounded in a customer’s data, policies, approval chains, and organizational structure, helping users ensure work doesn’t just move faster, but gets done right.

Availability

What customers say about conversational AI that gets work done

Siemens

"At Siemens, our operational excellence depends on the productivity and focus of our people,” said Elmar Spreitzer, head of IT digital foundation at Siemens AG. “By leveraging ServiceNow, we've brought conversational AI directly to our employees, delivering seamless IT support and instant company communications. This eliminates administrative friction and preserves institutional knowledge, ensuring our workforce stays focused on what matters most: delivering exceptional outcomes for Siemens customers.”

Medtronic

“Empathy inspires every aspect of our work. With ServiceNow we have completely transformed complex internal processes to enhance the experience for our employees,” said Louise Ernewein, principal content management specialist at Medtronic. “We’ve brought new capabilities to our platform, building more than 100 custom use cases with Moveworks and ServiceNow to support our employees so that they can quickly find what they need and focus on providing the exceptional care our patients deserve.”

About ServiceNow

ServiceNow (NYSE: NOW) is the AI control tower for business reinvention. The ServiceNow AI Platform integrates with any cloud, any model, and any data source to orchestrate how work flows across the enterprise. By unifying legacy systems, departmental tools, cloud applications, and AI agents, ServiceNow provides a single pane of glass that connects intelligence to execution across every corner of business. With more than 100 billion workflows running on the platform each year, ServiceNow helps organizations turn fragmented operations into coordinated, autonomous workflows that deliver measurable results. Learn how ServiceNow puts AI to work for people at www.servicenow.com.

Forward-looking statements

This press release contains “forward-looking statements” about the expectations, beliefs, plans, and intentions relating to ServiceNow Otto. Such statements include statements regarding future product capabilities and offerings and expected benefits to ServiceNow. Forward-looking statements are subject to known and unknown risks and uncertainties and are based on potentially inaccurate assumptions that could cause actual results to differ materially from those expected or implied by the forward-looking statements. If any such risks or uncertainties materialize or if any of the assumptions prove incorrect, ServiceNow’s results could differ materially from the results expressed or implied by the forward-looking statements made. ServiceNow undertakes no obligation, and does not intend, to update the forward-looking statements. Factors that may cause actual results to differ materially from those in any forward-looking statements include: (i) delays and unexpected difficulties and expenses in executing the product capabilities and offerings, (ii) changes in the regulatory landscape related to AI and (iii) uncertainty as to whether sales will justify the investments in the product capabilities and offerings. Further information on factors that could affect ServiceNow’s financial and other results is included in the filings ServiceNow makes with the Securities and Exchange Commission from time to time.

© 2026 ServiceNow, Inc. All rights reserved. ServiceNow, the ServiceNow logo, Now, and other ServiceNow marks are trademarks and/or registered trademarks of ServiceNow, Inc. in the United States and/or other countries. Other company names, product names, and logos may be trademarks of the respective companies with which they are associated.

ServiceNow Otto

ServiceNow Otto

NEW YORK (AP) — Tina Charles, the WNBA's all-time leading rebounder, is retiring from the league, the eight-time All-Star announced Tuesday on social media.

Charles, who had 4,262 rebounds in her career, also finished as the league's No. 2 all-time scorer behind Diana Taurasi. The 15-year veteran scored 8,396 points in the regular season.

“Today, I officially announce my retirement from basketball. Fifteen years at the professional level and a lifetime of love for this game," Charles wrote in her post. "I’ve experienced the highest highs and the lowest lows, and I’m thankful for all of it. Through it all, I learned how to show up. When doubt got loud and narratives were written about me, I kept showing up. That’s the New Yorker in me, where resilience is built, not talked about.”

Charles was the No. 1 pick by the Connecticut Sun in 2010 after helping the UConn Huskies win consecutive NCAA championships in 2009 and 2010. She was the AP Player of the Year in 2010.

She played with the Sun until 2013 before a blockbuster trade sent her home to New York.

“She is undeniably one of the most impactful players to ever wear a Liberty uniform and one of the most accomplished athletes our league has ever seen,” Liberty CEO Keia Clarke said. “Her excellence on the court, her leadership in the locker room and her unwavering commitment to pouring so much into the New York community, the city that raised her will endure for generations.”

Charles starred in her hometown through the 2019 season. She sat out the WNBA bubble season the next year before playing in Washington, Phoenix, Seattle and Atlanta. Charles came back to Connecticut last season and started 42 games while averaging 16.3 points and 5.8 rebounds.

“Tina Charles has been one of the most prolific scorers and rebounder our league has ever seen and her impact in the community has been just as powerful as her impact on the floor,” Atlanta Dream GM Dan Padover said. “Tina had a historic career and was a cornerstone player during an important time of our league's growth.”

The 37-year-old center helped the U.S. win three Olympic gold medals as well as three World Cup championships. She earned WNBA MVP honors in 2012 and was the league's top scorer in two seasons. The one thing Charles never had a chance to do was play in a WNBA Finals.

“This game gave me everything, and I’ll miss it deeply,” Charles said. “But my mom always taught me, don’t stop at what you’ve done, keep going toward what you still see. And I still see so much. There are still dreams in my heart waiting to be lived, and I can’t wait to share that journey with you all.”

Besides her impact on the court, Charles has left a lasting one off of it, helping to save countless lives for more than a decade with her charity — Hopey's Heart Foundation. She's donated 500 AEDs (automated external defibrillators) through the organization that started in 2013 and is named in honor of her aunt.

It's dedicated to curbing deaths in the United States from sudden cardiac arrest. The organization works to ensure schools and public places have lifesaving equipment such as defibrillators on hand.

Charles said that before she started the foundation she didn’t realize how common and deadly sudden cardiac arrest could be until she read about Wes Leonard, a high school basketball player who suffered a heart attack and died after basketball practice in 2011.

And when her aunt died a few years later from organ failure, Charles committed herself to helping to solve the problem.

In 2017, when Charles was playing for the New York Liberty, she was surprised by the team by a man who was saved by one of the AEDs that the star had donated.

“Beyond her extraordinary accomplishments, Tina has represented the very best of the WNBA throughout her career," WNBA Commissioner Cathy Engelbert said in a statement. "Through her leadership and dedication to giving back — including her work with her Hopey’s Heart Foundation — she has made a meaningful impact far beyond the game, earning the Dawn Staley Community Leadership Award twice.

"Her legacy will be defined not only by her excellence on the court, but by the standard she set as a leader, a teammate, and a champion for the communities she touched.”

AP WNBA: https://apnews.com/hub/wnba-basketball

Connecticut Sun's Tina Charles plays against the Indiana Fever during the second half of a WNBA basketball game, July 15, 2025, in Boston. (AP Photo/Michael Dwyer, File)

Connecticut Sun's Tina Charles plays against the Indiana Fever during the second half of a WNBA basketball game, July 15, 2025, in Boston. (AP Photo/Michael Dwyer, File)

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