What Google Cloud Next 2026 actually told us about the titan pecking order
Google Cloud Next 2026 wrapped last week. The official version of the story is the one Google wanted you to read: 260 announcements, 1,302 customer use cases, the Gemini Enterprise Agent Platform, eighth-generation TPUs, a $750 million partner fund, an $240 billion Marketplace backlog. Big numbers. On-message keynote. Tidy "agentic era" framing.
The more interesting story is who showed up to validate it, and what Google actually built underneath.
Five of the seven enterprise titans I track walked into Las Vegas and announced expanded partnerships that all rest on the same architecture: Gemini Enterprise as the agent control plane, with the titan's product playing the role of premium ingredient. Salesforce. SAP. ServiceNow. Oracle. Adobe. Add Workday and Palantir Technologies to the picture, both adjacent to my titan list but visibly aligned in the same direction.
Two titans were not in the picture. Microsoft, because Copilot is the direct counter-position and Cloud Next is not Microsoft's stage. Zoho, because Zoho's stack does not need a Google motion and Zoho's buyer is not the same buyer.
Both absences matter. More about them a little later.
What Google actually built
Let’s start with the framing. Google did not just ship a model platform with new features. It repositioned Google Cloud from "AI development environment" to enterprise agent control plane. Vertex AI services and roadmap evolutions are now delivered through the new Agent Platform rather than as a standalone product. That is not a naming change, it's an entirely different playground.
The Agent Platform stack now visibly includes:
· Agent Identity for cryptographically secure agent authentication
· Agent Registry as the catalog of every agent and MCP server in scope
· Agent Gateway for traffic control and screening
· Agent Observability for production monitoring
· Agent Simulation for pre-deployment testing
· Agent Evaluation for measurable performance against benchmarks
· Agent Runtime with sub-second cold start
· Agent Inbox for human oversight of long-running agents
· Agent Studio as the low-code builder
· Agent Development Kit (ADK) across Python, Go, Java, with TypeScript
Sitting alongside this is the new Knowledge Catalog, which aggregates native context from partner data platforms and applications including Salesforce Data360, SAP, ServiceNow, Workday, and Palantir into a single accessible layer for Gemini agents.
That layer matters. It is the third leg of the orchestration story alongside interface (Gemini Enterprise app, Slack, Workspace) and runtime (Agent Platform). And physics teaches us that a third leg creates stability.
The Agent Marketplace and Agent Gallery surface partner-built agents directly inside the Gemini Enterprise app, with an IT-driven request-and-approval governance model. Open protocols carry the connective tissue: A2A, A2UI, and MCP, all positioned as neutral interoperability standards rather than proprietary lock-in.
This is the playground Google built. It is not a naming change. It is Google trying to redraw the enterprise AI battlefield.
Not by owning the CRM.
Not by owning the ERP.
Not by owning ITSM, HCM, marketing automation, or the system of record.
But by embracing them all.
It is Google Cloud repositioning from “AI development platform” to enterprise agent control plane.
Now look at who joined this merry party.
The seven partnership announcements, decoded one by one.
Salesforce
Agentforce Sales is in open beta inside Gemini Enterprise. Slack hosts Gemini Enterprise as a private preview app. Agentforce gets native Gemini reasoning through Atlas Reasoning Engine, with multimodal support across text, image, and video. Zero-copy access to Google Lakehouse is on the late-2026 roadmap. New BigQuery connectors for Salesforce Informatica IDMC are available now. Pepkor reportedly consolidated 64 million customer profiles down to 24 million using Salesforce Data 360 plus BigQuery, a 25 percent personalization reach lift. The framing from Srini Tallapragada is "agentic interoperability".
The translation is simple: Salesforce is letting Google become a distribution and work-surface partner for Agentforce, while Salesforce keeps the customer-data gravity and Atlas Reasoning Engine. Slack is the part of the deal that helps Salesforce most. Google Workspace and Gemini Enterprise are too big to ignore. This move is consistent with the recently announced Headless 360.
The tension that nobody named on stage is nevertheless there. If a buyer ends up with Agentforce on one side and Gemini Enterprise on the other, who governs the agents, where do they run, and which vendor gets paid for the orchestration? That fight is coming. Get yourself some popcorn!
SAP
SAP's announcement was imo the most strategically interesting of the week, and worth having a deeper look.
SAP Business Data Cloud (BDC) Connect for Google enables bidirectional zero-copy data sharing between SAP and BigQuery. Cortex Framework metadata in BigQuery grounds Gemini agents in SAP enterprise context. Joule Agents in SAP CX become deployable inside Gemini Enterprise. SAP Engagement Cloud picks up agentic capabilities for content development, marketing briefs, visual concepts, and collaborative multi-agent execution. Marketing is the first GA use case in H2 2026, with the model designed to extend across the SAP CX portfolio over time.
The headline from SAP itself describes Gemini Enterprise as "central hub for data integrations and multi-agent coordination”. On the surface, that is a vendor conceding the orchestration layer.
It is not. Read it again.
SAP is not handing over the operational core. SAP is making sure the Gemini agents that buyers run cannot meaningfully execute against enterprise data without going through SAP's very own grounding layer. Cortex Framework metadata in BigQuery is the move that matters. It means the semantic context for "what a customer record actually means in this enterprise" runs on SAP's side. Google gets the AI execution layer. SAP gets to stay the meaning layer.
That is SAP looking stronger, not weaker. The friendly stage handshake is going to turn into a knife fight in the field about where business logic lives. SAP appears to have positioned itself well for that fight.
ServiceNow
ServiceNow AI Control Tower integrates with Gemini Enterprise Agent Platform so that every agent and MCP server across both platforms appears in a single governed registry. Now Assist for IT Operations Management is available through Gemini Enterprise, focused on alert and incident management. Joint solutions ship in three industry domains: 5G autonomous network operations, retail predictive maintenance, and IT systems, all using ServiceNow agents and Gemini agents handing off through MCP and A2A. ServiceNow took home four 2026 Google Cloud Partner of the Year awards, including Agentic AI Innovation.
John Aisien positioned the agreement as "open, interoperable platforms, not walled gardens”. This framing is doing real work, and it is also strategically necessary. ServiceNow is the workflow titan most directly in Google's strategic crosshairs. Both companies want to be the orchestration layer above all systems. This partnership smooths the surface. Still, the strategic overlap is significant.
ServiceNow's strongest argument remains: "We already run the workflows, approvals, incidents, assets, service models, and operational context. Don't bolt orchestration on top. Run it where the work already lives". Google's counter is: "We can orchestrate across all of you, including ServiceNow". Both arguments are valid, and both are strong. Buyers will pick based on what they value more, neutrality across systems or depth inside the workflow platform that already governs work.
Partners today. Rival underneath. Both are true.
Oracle
Oracle's announcements were broader than the Database Agent that most coverage led with. The full set: Oracle AI Database Agent for Gemini Enterprise (currently in preview on Google Cloud Marketplace), a Managed MCP Server for Oracle workloads (also in preview), Database Center integration, Knowledge Catalog integration, GoldenGate integration, VPC Service Controls. Oracle AI Database@Google Cloud is now available across 15 regions with more to come.
Business users can query Oracle data in natural language without writing SQL. Identity propagates from Gemini Enterprise to the database via OAuth. Oracle's Deep Data Security enforces row- and column-level access at the database layer. Query processing stays inside the database, which Oracle frames as a security and latency benefit, and which has the side effect of keeping Oracle's data gravity intact.
Oracle is doing what Oracle has always done well. Make sure its database estate is unavoidable. Give Google enough access that the partnership is real. Do not pretend Oracle is going to own the AI front end. The Managed MCP Server, Knowledge Catalog hookup, Database Center, and GoldenGate pieces all point in the same direction: Oracle data stays central to AI execution regardless of where the agents are built; and the data stays in Oracle.
The database does not need applause. It needs to remain indispensable. Mission accomplished, I'd say.
Adobe
Adobe Marketing Agent for Gemini Enterprise lands in Google’s Agent Gallery. It connects natural language queries to Adobe's CX agentic capabilities, with insights on campaign performance, audiences, and journey monitoring, accessible from inside Gemini Enterprise. The integration is more lightweight than the others, which is consistent with Adobe's pattern.
Adobe benefits from showing up in the Gemini work surface, especially when marketing teams already live and breathe inside Workspace and Slack. But this is a distribution play, not a control-layer move on the level of SAP, Salesforce, Oracle, or ServiceNow. Adobe joins the gallery without conceding much architecturally and without claiming a piece of the orchestration plane. This is consistent with the Adobe Summit messaging.
Workday
Workday shows up through the Sana Self-Service Agent, which summarizes information from Workday and other sources and handles HR and finance tasks across hundreds of skills covering pay, time, and absence. Workday is also part of the Knowledge Catalog third-party context aggregation.
Workday is playing the employee-service and finance/HR productivity angle. It’s useful, sticky, high-volume in daily user activity. Compared with SAP and ServiceNow, it is narrower in operational control. Compared with Adobe, it is comparable in scope. Workday had a solid presence at this event, not a strategic re-positioning.
Palantir
Google says that Palantir is adding Gemini and BigQuery integrations for commercial customers, connecting models to critical AI workflows and operations. Palantir is also part of the Knowledge Catalog third-party context aggregation.
Palantir is the awkward guest at the titan table. It’s not a classic business application vendor but increasingly competing at the operational decision layer with Foundry and AIP. Google wants Palantir workloads close to BigQuery and Gemini. Palantir wants model optionality without losing AIP control. The integration is real and worth tracking precisely because Palantir does not usually settle for being an ingredient.
The pecking order this event produced
Most strategically advantaged: Google Cloud. It created the playground. The full agent control plane (Identity, Registry, Gateway, Observability, Simulation, Evaluation), the Knowledge Catalog, and the Marketplace make Google the layer everyone else runs on. Google’s risk is that it wants to be the enterprise control plane without owning the transactional cores that SAP, Salesforce, Oracle, ServiceNow, and Workday control. That requires relentless execution, not keynote poetry.
Most durable titan: SAP. SAP owns the operational core. The combination of BDC Connect and Cortex Framework gives SAP a stronger bridge into Google's AI without surrendering enterprise meaning. SAP's posture is "use Google's AI, but ground it in SAP business truth". That is the right defense and a subtle offense at the same time.
Most interesting tension: Salesforce. There's a great integration story today. The unresolved question is whether Agentforce and Gemini Enterprise will eventually compete for governance and orchestration once buyers are running both in production. And they will. Procurement will notice when both vendors invoice for the same workflow.
Most direct control-plane rival: ServiceNow. A visible partner. And an architectural competitor. The "open, interoperable" framing is correct in principle, and it is also the terminology a vendor uses when its core product overlaps strategically with the platform it just partnered with. The deciding factor for buyers is whether they want a neutral AI control plane above systems, or agentic execution inside the workflow platform that already governs work.
Most pragmatic: Oracle. No applause needed. The database stays indispensable. Managed MCP Server, GoldenGate, Knowledge Catalog hookup, VPC Service Controls all point in the right direction for Oracle. That’s pragmatic, and dangerous in the right way.
Useful but narrower: Adobe and Workday. Both gain Gemini Enterprise distribution reach. Neither announcement changes their strategic center of gravity. There is nothing earthshattering about them. They are domain wins, not control-plane bids.
Adjacent: Palantir. This is worth watching specifically because Palantir does not usually accept ingredient status.
The two missing names
Microsoft. Copilot exists exactly to defend the position Google is now contesting. Microsoft has spent two years building Copilot Studio, Microsoft 365 Copilot, Dynamics 365 agents, and an Azure-side AI tooling that competes head-on with what Google just announced. Microsoft was never going to show up at Cloud Next to validate Gemini Enterprise. Why would it?
The more interesting question is whether Salesforce, SAP, ServiceNow, and Oracle agents will sit as comfortably inside Copilot in twelve months as they now do inside Gemini Enterprise. Right now, the answer is no, and the gap appears to be widening. I expect Microsoft to respond at Build and Ignite. The main question then is whether the response will be "we have parity" or "we are bigger and we will route around you”.
Zoho works a different market segment. Zoho also builds its own AI stack. The company rarely participates in this kind of big vendor partnership theater. The absence is consistent and not so interesting when looked at in isolation. It becomes interesting, however, when paired with the observation that Zoho's mid-market and SMB-plus customers are largely outside the buying pattern Cloud Next 2026 is shaping. Two different conversations happening in two different rooms.
Open protocols, not walled gardens. Maybe.
I want to be careful about reading the "open, interoperable" framing.
A2A, A2UI, and MCP are all real, and they matter. ServiceNow's positioning is correct in principle. Salesforce kept Slack. Oracle kept the database. SAP kept Joule as the engagement layer in SAP applications. Adobe kept its CX stack untouched. Workday kept HR. Palantir kept AIP. None of these vendors handed over the asset they care most about.
But the registry is Google's. The gateway is Google's. The gallery, the runtime, the inbox, the identity model, the agent governance plane: all Google. Open protocols are not the same thing as a neutral platform. They are the price of admission to a platform that acts as a host.
The real question for the next twelve months is whether the protocols stay open enough that buyers can swap the host. If a customer can take A2A-compliant agents built around Gemini Enterprise and re-host them on Copilot Studio or AWS Bedrock AgentCore without rewriting most of the orchestration, the open framing holds. If swapping costs are high in practice, "open" is doing marketing work that the architecture does not back up.
I do not yet have any evidence either way. I expect to in the next two quarters with the first multi-vendor pilots moving into production.
What buyers should do this quarter
Force each titan to defend the front door. Salesforce will say Slack and Agentforce. SAP will say Engagement Cloud and Joule. ServiceNow will say ServiceNow. Microsoft will say Copilot. Google will say Gemini Enterprise. Make them defend the answer with specific cross-system workflows for agentic work. Note which vendor accepts being an ingredient in someone else's interface and which one fights for the seat.
Pin down the dates on zero-copy commitments. The Salesforce zero-copy with Google Lakehouse is late 2026. SAP BDC Connect is rolling out across 2026. Oracle's Managed MCP Server is in preview. Most of the headline-friendly capabilities are not in your tenant today. Build your 2026 plan around what you can run by Q3, not what is on a slide.
If you are a Microsoft shop, run a parallel evaluation. Bring in Copilot Studio. Ask whether Salesforce, SAP, and ServiceNow agents are first-class citizens inside it at the depth that Cloud Next demonstrated for Gemini Enterprise. Force Microsoft to demonstrate parity, not promises.
Treat the Agent Marketplace and Agent Gallery as procurement infrastructure. If your IT team adopts Gemini Enterprise as the agent procurement layer, that decision shapes which titans show up first in your future RFPs. Make this choice deliberately.
Test the governance question before you buy. If you end up with Agentforce, Joule, Now Assist, and a Gemini-Enterprise-built custom agent all running for the same business process, who governs them? Procurement will notice when you are paying twice for orchestration. Make a vendor own the answer in writing, and see to it that the SKUs do not overlap too much.
The unspoken partnership
The most interesting partnership at Next 2026 was the one nobody put in a press release. Five of seven titans, plus Workday and Palantir, plus a long list of consulting firms and ISVs, are all visibly aligning to ensure that Microsoft Copilot is not the only place enterprise AI gets done. None of them said that. All of their actions imply it.
That is the alliance worth watching.
I am still skeptical about how durable this alignment is once Microsoft responds, and buyer realities surface in the second half of 2026, and once we see what "open protocol" really means in production. All vendors will optimize for their own positions. They always do, and they need to. The orchestration question may stay answered for a year, or it may reopen the moment someone like Microsoft offers a credible alternative.
For now, Gemini Enterprise has the momentum. The titans showed up. The protocols are public. The Marketplace is live. The control-plane components are named. Google moved from "another model vendor" to "the agentic substrate the application titans run inside of”.
This is a very different conversation than the one we were having last year. It’s worth paying close attention to how it evolves and whether it is the right one.

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