Snowflake Inc‘s (NYSE:SNOW) earnings call may have marked one of the clearest signs yet that AI is starting to move from experimentation into real enterprise monetization.
The company's shares surged more than 35% premarket after management directly tied accelerating growth to adoption of its AI products, particularly Cortex Code, or "Cocoa," its AI-powered coding and workflow platform.
More importantly, Snowflake no longer appears to be framing AI as merely a future opportunity.
It says AI is actively driving the business right now.
"AI is accelerating consumption in our core platform," CEO Sridhar Ramaswamy said during the company's earnings call.
That statement matters because investors have spent the last year debating whether AI would actually increase spending on enterprise software platforms — or simply commoditize them.
Snowflake is arguing the opposite is happening.
Snowflake Says AI Is Creating A Flywheel
Management repeatedly emphasized that AI products are pushing customers to migrate more workloads onto Snowflake faster in order to access enterprise data, governance and workflows needed to deploy AI systems securely.
The company said Cortex Code and Snowflake Intelligence are seeing the "fastest adoption of any new products in our history."
CFO Brian Robbins made perhaps the most important comment of the entire call. "Cocoa had the largest driver to the increase in our forecast," he said. That's a significant shift.
For much of the past two years, AI discussions across software earnings calls have centered around pilots, experimentation and long-term possibilities. Snowflake is now explicitly linking AI products to raised guidance and accelerating growth.
Product revenue growth accelerated to 34% year over year, while Snowflake raised its full-year product revenue outlook.
Snowflake Wants To Become The ‘Agent Control Plane'
The company also revealed a much broader ambition than simply being a cloud data warehouse.
Management repeatedly described Snowflake as an "agent control plane" — essentially positioning the platform as the orchestration layer where enterprise AI agents interact with data, workflows and applications.
"What customers increasingly want is one place to get work done," Ramaswamy said.
That positioning could become increasingly important as enterprises move beyond chatbots toward AI agents capable of taking actions across systems and workflows.
And judging by the market's reaction, investors appear increasingly willing to reward software companies that can prove AI is driving real revenue acceleration — not just generating headlines.
Photo: JHVEPhoto / Shutterstock
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