Start with the CSA certification
The Certified System Administrator certification is the recognised entry point. Without it, your CV does not pass the keyword filter at most companies. Budget 4-8 weeks of study if you are starting from zero. Use the official learning path on learning.servicenow.com — it is free.
Get a Personal Developer Instance (PDI)
Register at developer.servicenow.com for a free PDI. This is your lab. Every ServiceNow concept you learn should be implemented in your PDI. Employers want developers who have done things, not just read about them.
Projects to build on your PDI:
- Custom application with a proper data model, ACLs, and Business Rules
- REST integration pulling data from a public API into a custom table
- Flow Designer automation for a business scenario
- Service Catalog item with workflow approval
The CAD certification jump
Once you have the CSA, start studying for the Certified Application Developer (CAD). Most mid-level development roles require or prefer it. It demonstrates you can build — not just administer.
Where to find entry-level roles
- ServiceNow partners (implementation consultancies) actively hire people with 0-1 year experience and certifications
- LinkedIn searches for "ServiceNow administrator" or "ServiceNow developer junior"
- Staffing agencies that specialise in ServiceNow
- ServiceNow's own Community job board
What employers actually check
For entry-level roles, employers check: CSA certification (hard requirement at most companies), any portfolio work on your PDI (can you demo something?), basic scripting knowledge (GlideRecord, Business Rules). They do not expect 3 years of production experience from a junior candidate.
ServiceNow partner vs in-house
Partners give you faster exposure — you work on 3-4 different implementations in your first year. In-house roles are more stable but slower learning curve. For a first role, a ServiceNow partner is usually the better path for skill development.