As someone who has spent significant time in IT support, I've seen numerous attempts to ‘revolutionize’ the service desk experience.
Some of them have indeed been successful at pushing boundaries. However, none come close to agentic AI. In this case, ‘revolutionize’ truly seems like the right word.
In our recent webinar, I sat down with Arkajit Datta, Applied AI researcher at Atomicwork, who’s worked extensively on building our agentic AI architecture. We discussed all about the ‘what, why, and how’ of agentic AI for IT support.
You can watch the full recording here or scroll on for the key takeaways.
Traditional ITSM, as you already know, has been fraught with repetitive tasks. Even with the introduction of chatbots, users needed to navigate decision trees or receive contextless responses. What makes agentic AI stand out is its ability to maintain context and perform actions across multiple systems.
For example, let’s say a user is unable to access SharePoint. A smart AI assistant, like ‘Atom’ starts engaging in an exploratory conversation instead of simply pointing them to a KB article or a ‘new ticket’ form. Just like a human agent would probe to understand the issue completely, Atom asks contextual follow-up questions to know what the user exactly needs.
In this case, the intelligent agent arrives at the conclusion that the Sharepoint password needs to be reset and guides the user through the process. It can also detect if the user has not reset the password even a few minutes later and can proactively follow up to check if they need any additional help.
Now, that’s something I didn’t think AI would be able to do anytime soon. And that’s why agentic AI is special.
In general, what is striking about agentic AI is how it can go beyond simple automation. Here are some other things it can do:
We started implementing this agentic approach for one of our customers and Atom could gather all the organizational context for helpful responses.
Atom understood role-based access, provided location-specific responses without explicit input, and even refused to share engineering-specific information with HR team members – all without being explicitly programmed for these scenarios. That’s pretty powerful.
Here's why I’m excited about agentic service management — it's not just about reducing ticket volume, it's about fundamentally transforming how organizations deliver IT support.
For IT leaders, this means:
Ultimately, IT leaders can not just amplify the productivity of both IT and end users, they will also reduce support costs and scale exponentially faster.
What became clear during our webinar is that we're witnessing a fundamental shift in service management—one where AI doesn't just understand requests but can also execute complex tasks across multiple systems.
The future of ITSM isn't about replacing human agents; it’s about empowering them with intelligent tools that can handle routine tasks while providing a better context for complex issues.
As organizations continue to adopt these technologies, the focus will increasingly shift from manual ticket management to strategic service delivery, which will be powered by intelligent, context-aware systems that truly understand and address user needs while working seamlessly across the entire organizational technology stack.
To learn more about agentic service management and how it can transform your IT operations, catch our full discussion here.