Vonage, part of Ericsson, has announced the launch of a native integration with ServiceNow Voice.
The solution embeds voice and real-time AI capabilities directly into ServiceNow’s Customer Service Management (CSM) and IT Service Management (ITSM) workflows for Vonage Contact Center (VCC) customers.
The move represents an expansion of an existing relationship between the two companies; it is described as a way to give agents everything they need inside a single environment, without the screen-switching and manual data entry that currently slows down service delivery.
In discussing the news, Mila D’Antonio, Principal Analyst for Customer Engagement at Omdia, outlined the core problem that the integration is trying to solve:
“Vonage is combating the traditional disconnect between digital and live interactions, ensuring that voice becomes a seamless continuation of the customer journey rather than a disruptive restart.”
That disconnect is a familiar frustration for contact center leaders. Voice has long been the odd one out in the omnichannel conversation; technically present, but rarely as tightly woven into backend workflows as digital channels.
With this integration, Vonage is pushing to change that, at least for the sizable base of enterprises already operating within the ServiceNow ecosystem.
What the Integration Actually Does for Agents
On the practical side, live calls can automatically trigger incident categorization, initiate ServiceNow Flow Designer subflows, and update issue resolution data in real time.
Agents don’t need to leave the ServiceNow AI Platform to handle any of it. For IT support teams in particular, where speed of resolution is a key performance metric, cutting out that manual effort could make a meaningful difference to how cases progress.
Reggie Scales, President and Head of Business Unit Applications at Vonage, framed it as a natural extension of what VCC already does:
“Vonage Contact Center is known for its deep integrations with leading customer relationship management tools, that equip enterprises to boost agent productivity and deepen customer engagement.
“By adding natively integrated voice capabilities to our existing VCC for ServiceNow solution, we bring a differentiated combination of voice, digital, AI, and real-time engagement for enterprise workflow management and an enhanced customer experience.”
In the official Vonage announcement, the company broke down the tool into the following four core capabilities:
- Agents remain natively integrated within ServiceNow CSM and ITSM
- AI-driven productivity via real-time transcription
- Seamless workflow automation that connects live calls directly to case and incident management
- Improved AI context through structured voice data embedded into ServiceNow records
The AI Angle ServiceNow Is Betting On
From ServiceNow’s side, the appeal goes beyond workflow efficiency. As enterprises lean more heavily on generative AI tools, the quality of the underlying data becomes even more important.
Structured voice data fed directly into ServiceNow records gives those tools a more complete interaction context to work with, which should produce more accurate outputs and better-informed AI-driven decisions.
Alix Douglas, Group Vice President of Partner Solutions at ServiceNow, pointed to that potential:
“Vonage Contact Center, built on the ServiceNow AI Platform, empowers organizations to put AI into action with agents that accelerate resolution, reduce manual effort, and deliver more consistent, connected service experiences.
“Together, we are turning intelligence into meaningful outcomes.”
For the unified agent experience piece in particular, the CX case is hard to argue against, with fragmented tooling being outlined as one of the most persistent pain points across the industry.
According to Capgemini’s 2025 Customer Service Transformation report, 73% of executives cite fragmented, siloed IT systems as a significant challenge; the productivity drag that creates for agents is increasingly hard to ignore.
Anything that reduces unnecessary context-switching has a direct line to agent satisfaction and, in turn, to the customer experience they’re able to deliver.
First Salesforce, Now ServiceNow
The ServiceNow announcement is the latest move in what is becoming a clear pattern for Vonage.
In December 2025, the company struck a similar deal with Salesforce, embedding VCC natively into Agentforce 360 with the same core ambition: keep agents in one environment, reduce friction, and give AI tools the voice data context they need to perform.
Taken together, the two integrations suggest Vonage is methodically working through the major enterprise platforms, using deep native voice integration as its primary competitive lever.