ServiceNow has announced a C$110MN multi-year investment to offer AI deployment capabilities across Canada’s public sector.
The CX management platform has committed to supporting AI adoption at scale, directly aiding in improving service delivery nationwide for Canadian citizens.
This will also allow Canadian enterprises to continue enhancing customer experiences, while remaining compliant with their country’s policies and requirements.
Improving AI Deployment in Canada
ServiceNow has begun its commitment to address AI deployment challenges in Canada with its decision to invest in the public sector market.
Recent data shows many Canadian businesses that have experimented with AI are struggling to deploy or scale it – nearly half cite talent shortages and over 90% remain in early-stage or pilot deployments rather than full production
However, by deploying native servers within Canada’s borders, ServiceNow can begin an AI expansion strategy for its Canadian customers and support the public sector in modernizing its organizations.
This will also allow ServiceNow to strengthen its current relationship with the country and its government departments to accelerate digital transformation through transparency and trust.
This investment also includes the Canada Centre of Excellence (CoE), an infrastructure and expert team created by ServiceNow based within the country, which focuses on improving AI, cloud, and digital transformation work for public-sector customers.
This will allow CoE customer agencies and organizations to run and deploy AI workloads, as well as manage AI and cloud solutions within Canada’s compliance rules using the ServiceNow platform.
This segment is expected to improve Canada’s overall AI expertise and knowledge, bringing in 100 new Canada-based jobs, and likely seeing an increase in overall AI usage.
Chris Ellison, Group Vice President and General Manager at ServiceNow Canada, highlighted how this investment could directly improve Canada’s public sector by transforming the way AI interacts with its residents.
“This is a major investment in Canada’s digital future,” he explained.
“We’re deepening our commitment to the Canadian economy – creating high-skilled jobs, expanding our local footprint, and helping the Canadian public sector to modernize how it serves citizens.
“Our customers are asking for greater efficiency and the ability to scale with AI, and this investment ensures we can continue to deliver exactly that, securely and quickly.”
Improving Canadian Services
By supporting reliability and data protection within ServiceNow’s AI-ready infrastructure, Canadian customers can experience faster workflow automation with local services, offering speedier response times and positive service outcomes.
Public sector teams can also begin to adopt AI tools at a faster pace with fewer barriers if ServiceNow’s capabilities allow them to deploy with compliance regulations.
This also allows Canadian customers to experience a broader range of modernized services, positioning the country in an ideal position to attract more vendor giants willing to deploy AI solutions tailored to the country’s needs.
Furthermore, this will enable Canada to increase the scalability of its AI deployment further across additional sectors to enhance its overall AI intelligence.
Evan Solomon, Canada’s Minister of AI and Digital Innovation, explained how ServiceNow’s decision to partner with the Canadian government to enhance AI capabilities could improve the country in several areas.
“Advancing secure AI adoption and digital sovereignty is essential to building a resilient Canadian economy,” he said.
“Collaborations like this show how together public sector and industry can drive trusted innovation that benefits Canadians.”
Meeting Compliance Standards
By making long-term investments in Canada’s AI customer-facing future, residents can begin to confidently utilize AI in service experiences, knowing that its businesses are deploying these tools in alignment with the country’s regulatory framework.
ServiceNow has previously worked alongside Canada’s various federal government departments, crown corporations, and major cities to build its AI-ready infrastructure designed to meet government requirements.
The vendor has also confirmed that it will continue to build on these existing relationships to ensure this foundation meets the changing regulations around data security, privacy, residency, and operational control.
Regarding data residency, ServiceNow has confirmed that the servers holding the platform and data will be stored within the country, further ensuring the company meets Canada’s laws on data protection and privacy.