
Microsoft is making a significant change in its artificial intelligence (AI) strategy by integrating Anthropic’s Claude models into its popular Office 365 suite.
This integration marks a move away from the tech giant’s exclusive reliance on OpenAI’s models, a partnership Microsoft has relied heavily to continue leading the AI arms race.
Microsoft will incorporate Anthropic’s Claude Sonnet 4 AI technology into its Office 365 suite, including apps like Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and Outlook. This integration will enhance the capabilities of these applications and offer users more powerful AI tools to work with.
At the core of this strategic decision are internal tests by Microsoft that showed Claude Sonnet 4 outperformed OpenAI’s GPT models in key productivity tasks. Office AI developers found that Claude excelled in automating complex Excel tasks and delivering more elegant and professional PowerPoint presentations.
This integration also reflects Microsoft’s broader push to diversify its AI supplier portfolio through its Azure AI foundry, which encompasses over 1,800 different AI models from various vendors including DeepSeek, Meta, Mistral AI and xAI.
Financially, Microsoft’s AI efforts, especially through OpenAI and coupled with efforts to integrate AI into Office 365, have reached a $13 billion annual run rate with 175% year-over-year growth.
However, despite these investments, Microsoft sees the integration of Anthropic’s Claude as a way to reduce risks associated with relying on a single AI supplier. The multi-model approach allows Microsoft to offer different AI solutions tailored to specific user tasks that would ultimately boost performance and business resilience.
The Anthropic Claude integration is expected to run alongside existing OpenAI-powered features, but with the AI startup still being at the frontline. “As we’ve said, OpenAI will continue to be our partner on frontier models and we remain committed to our long-term partnership,” a Microsoft spokesperson told Reuters.
Microsoft’s shift highlights the tech giant’s commitment to delivering the best AI-powered productivity tools by combining the strengths of multiple AI developers rather than relying on one “best” model. More importantly, this approach provides enterprises with more choice and better outcomes in real-world business workflows, where tasks vary widely in their AI needs.