ServiceNow just made it clear that workflow without intelligence is just choreography. On Feb 11, 2026, Globes reported an agreement for ServiceNow to acquire Pyramid Analytics, with CTech confirming coverage across Feb 11-12, 2026. The Israeli-built, Netherlands-incorporated decision intelligence company is being acquired for an estimated $100M+, while ServiceNow declined to disclose financial terms. In serious tech news, the number matters. The positioning matters more.
Pyramid Analytics BV is legally headquartered in Amsterdam, but its operational gravity sits in Israel, where 200+ employees anchor R&D, supported by teams across the U.S., U.K., Netherlands, UAE, and Germany. Founded in 2009, with early formation traces in 2008, the company was built by Omri Kohl, Avi Perez, and Herbert Ochtman around a simple enterprise truth: data is useless if only specialists can speak its language. Their platform unified data preparation, business analytics, and data science into 1 governed environment, enabling natural language queries that translate into operational action. Not dashboards. Decisions.
ServiceNow confirmed the acquisition on Feb 12, 2026 via a company blog authored by Gaurav Rewari, SVP & GM, Data & Analytics. The thesis is strategic and clean. If ServiceNow is the system where enterprise work happens, intelligence must live inside that workflow. Embedding Pyramid’s semantic layer and AI-powered analytics into the ServiceNow platform strengthens its push beyond automation into guided execution. In credible tech news, this is not expansion for vanity. It is infrastructure consolidation.
The capital trail tells its own story. Pyramid raised $250M to date, including $50M from BlackRock in Nov 2024. Backers include Sequoia Capital, Viola Growth, HIG Capital, and JVP. Customers cited in coverage include Kellogg’s, Hallmark, and Deloitte. This was not a speculative AI narrative. It was enterprise-grade decision intelligence with real logos and governed data models. That matters in a market fatigued by noise.
Timing sharpens the signal. This marks ServiceNow’s 2nd Israeli acquisition in under 2 months, following the $7.75B Armis deal. Bloomberg had already framed CEO Bill McDermott’s acquisition tempo as aggressive but disciplined. The Register characterized Pyramid as a tuck-in and not material to financial results. Translation for anyone tracking tech news closely: this is capability layering, not balance-sheet theatrics.
The competitive landscape is obvious. Microsoft has Power BI and Copilot. Salesforce has Tableau and Einstein. ServiceNow now strengthens its semantic and generative analytics posture inside workflow infrastructure. A pyramid is built in layers. So is platform power.
The real question is not what ServiceNow bought. It is what happens when workflow systems stop waiting for reports and start delivering governed answers in real time. When the system of record becomes a system of intelligence, who inside the enterprise gains leverage, and who loses control?


