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🐂 NOW — Multi-Source Profile

Based on public financial reports + SEC filings + public industry reports — Not investment advice

Total Mentions: 13 articles · Primary Role: other · Author Stance: 10🐂 / 0🐻

🏭 Industry Chain Position

⚔️ Competitors

MSFT · SAP · MICROSOFT (MSFT), SALESFORCE (CRM), ADOBE (ADBE)

🧠 Applicable Mental Models

Platform Moat (7× in NOW articles)

Definition: A platform moat refers to competitive advantages that protect a platform business from rivals, such as network effects, switching costs, or data advantages.

When to apply: Use to evaluate the defensibility of a platform business model.

Example invocations: - ServiceNow's AI integration deepens its platform moat by making it an irreplaceable control tower for enterprise workflows. - SAP uses API policy and partnerships to create a walled garden around its AI platform, making it harder for third-party agents to operate without SAP's control.

Cost Curve (4× in NOW articles)

Definition: The cost curve shows the relationship between production volume and cost per unit, typically declining with scale due to efficiencies.

When to apply: Apply to assess competitive advantage from scale economies or to predict pricing trends.

Example invocations: - ServiceNow's land-and-expand strategy and high renewal rates indicate a favorable cost curve as customers expand usage. - Mistral aims to be the most capital-efficient AI company by reducing training costs through better data and smaller models.

S-curve (3× in NOW articles)

Definition: The S-curve describes the pattern of adoption or performance improvement over time, starting slow, accelerating, then plateauing as limits are reached.

When to apply: Use to analyze technology adoption cycles or when a new technology may surpass an incumbent.

Example invocations: - ServiceNow is transitioning from the per-seat licensing S-curve to a new AI orchestration S-curve. - The article uses the S-curve to describe the rise of YouTube coinciding with the peak and decline of cable TV, and analogizes it to the current peak of SaaS software.

Bundle-Unbundle (2× in NOW articles)

Definition: Bundle-unbundle describes the cycle where products are combined into suites (bundling) or separated into specialized services (unbundling) to capture value.

When to apply: Apply to analyze market structure changes and opportunities for disintermediation.

Example invocations: - The article compares the unbundling of cable TV (bundle) by YouTube (unbundled content) to the unbundling of software from hardware and the potential commoditization of software. - SAP bundles agent creation (Joule Studio) with data access (Business Data Cloud) and model partnerships (Anthropic) to keep customers within its ecosystem.

Co-design Strategy (2× in NOW articles)

Definition: Co-design strategy involves collaborating with customers or partners in the design process to create tailored solutions and build lock-in.

When to apply: Use when developing complex products requiring deep customer integration.

Example invocations: - Google co-optimizes its TPU hardware with its Gemini models to deliver superior inference performance. - Microsoft co-designs AI models with both OpenAI and Mistral to ensure supply diversity.

⚠️ Top Risks (from articles)

  • valuation (medium): Multiple compression could persist if the market continues to classify NOW as a victim of AI displacement.
  • competition (medium): Competition from Microsoft, Salesforce, and Adobe could pressure margins or growth.
  • execution (low): Failure to sustain the transition to non-seat-based pricing or to maintain growth acceleration.
  • competition (medium): Easier entry for competitors targeting small businesses and Microsoft's strong positioning in AI agent management for large enterprises.
  • technology (medium): Lower switching costs due to AI could reduce customer lock-in over time.

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