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Why Traditional Managed Services No Longer Work

The ServiceNow platform has changed faster than most of the managed services models that support it. What was once an acceptable model of IT support now falls short. This is no longer about keeping systems running. It’s about continuous development, adapting to change, and aligning delivery to business outcomes.

There is still a place for stability and tactical responsiveness, of course. But if your ServiceNow managed services model begins and ends with break and fix, it is unlikely you’re making the most of your platform.

New workflows, new integrations, and new governance requirements keep coming. Expectations from the business are high, but the specialist expertise to meet them is hard to find.

And this is where many organisations are feeling the strain.

ServiceNow support is no longer just the ticket

The problem with traditional managed services isn’t that it resolves incidents poorly, but that such a reactive remit narrows the value it can add.

A ticket-led model tends to wait for demand to arrive. It responds to issues. It restores service. What it doesn’t inherently do is continuously improve the platform, connect delivery activity to business priorities, or help shape the platform’s next stage of maturity.

This really matters. Modern organisations don’t need ServiceNow to simply run. They need it to evolve:

• Enhancements must be quick, without creating instability.

• Support decisions must focus on both technical understanding and business context, rather than isolated incidents and narrow SLAs.

• Governance must be part of delivery, not something that appears later as operational friction.

In other words, organisations need a model that can support day-to-day operations and longer-term transformation priorities at the same time.

The value ceiling created by reactive support

One of the clearest signs that an organisation has outgrown a traditional model is when activity is visible, but progress is not.

Everything appears to be working well: tickets are being closed, SLAs met, the platform is stable.

But new capabilities take too long to introduce. Governance becomes a blocker rather than an enabler. Platform owners are forced to juggle day-to-day demands with roadmap decisions. Business stakeholders see ServiceNow as important, but not as responsive or as strategic as they need it to be.

In that environment, managed services set the status quo in stone rather than seek to improve it.

This is not just an operational issue, but a commercial one. When a business-critical platform is managed through a largely reactive model, value arrives more slowly than it should. Enhancements get delayed, decision-making fragments. And the platform’s potential remains underused, even when the technology itself is capable of far more.

Modern ServiceNow environments need a modern managed service model

What is needed is not simply better support, but a better model around the platform.

This involves blending agility with control (rather than treating them as trade-offs), embedding governance into day-to-day delivery, and having strategic input continuously available rather than only on occasions. This requires a service partner that operates as an extension of the internal team, with shared priorities, greater transparency, and a clearer focus on outcomes.

When organisations move from implementation into operational maturity, this becomes increasingly important. At that point, the question is no longer whether ServiceNow works, but whether the operating model supporting it is helping the platform mature, scale, and create measurable business value over time.

That is why the future of ServiceNow managed services must have a better model.

Moving beyond the traditional model!

ServiceNow is closely aligned with business transformation, governance and workflow maturity. In this context, managed services cannot afford to be run reactively. Instead, they must maintain momentum, improve platform health, and create the conditions for continuous value.

For some, that is primarily about speed, visibility, and better use of internal capacity. For others, particularly in the highly governed and regulated environments of Australia and New Zealand, it’s also about control, accountability, and confidence in how the platform is operated. Either way, the direction is the same: moving beyond support that simply keeps pace, and towards a model that helps the platform move forward.

If your ServiceNow environment is being supported but not strategically advanced, explore AC3’s modern managed services approach, download our eBook or get in touch with one of AC3’s local ServiceNow experts.