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OpenAI recently launched a new standalone business unit, backed by more than $4 billion in initial investment and built entirely around one goal – getting its AI systems working inside the daily operations of large businesses. 

The company is called the OpenAI Deployment Company, majority-owned and controlled by OpenAI, and formed as a partnership with 19 global investment firms, consultancies, and system integrators. It represents the clearest sign yet that the competitive edge in AI is no longer just about building the best model.

What DeployCo Will Do

The new company will focus on deploying specialists called Forward Deployed Engineers (FDEs), who will work directly with business leaders, operators, and frontline teams. Their role includes identifying high-impact AI opportunities, redesigning organizational infrastructure around AI capabilities, and building scalable systems. 

The idea is that these engineers do not just advise and hand over a strategy document; they sit with front-line teams, identify where AI can genuinely move the needle, build production systems connected to the organization’s actual data and processes, and stick around to make sure it all holds together under real-world pressure.

The Tomoro Acquisition

To give the new company an immediate workforce rather than starting from scratch, OpenAI agreed to acquire Tomoro, an applied AI consultancy with roughly 150 engineers who have already done this kind of work for clients like Tesco, Virgin Atlantic, and Supercell. The acquisition is expected to close within months, subject to customary closing conditions. 

Beyond Tomoro, OpenAI plans to use the $4 billion in initial investment to scale operations and acquire additional firms that can accelerate its deployment mission.

Who Is Backing This

The unit is backed by a multi-year partnership involving 19 firms, led by TPG, with Advent, Bain Capital, and Brookfield serving as co-lead founding partners. Other backers include Goldman Sachs, SoftBank Corp., Warburg Pincus, BBVA, and Emergence Capital. 

Notably, major consulting and systems integration firms, including Bain & Company, Capgemini, and McKinsey & Company, are also part of the partnership, giving OpenAI a direct line into companies that already advise large enterprises on technology adoption and business transformation.

Why the Timing Makes Sense

More than one million businesses worldwide are actively using OpenAI’s products and APIs, but according to Deloitte’s 2026 State of AI in the Enterprise report, meaningful transformation remains limited. Only 30 to 34% of companies have redesigned processes or operations around AI, and 84% have not redesigned roles, while returns on investment continue to lag behind adoption rates. That gap between access and actual results is exactly the problem DeployCo is designed to close.

The Broader Competition

OpenAI is not the only company making this move. Anthropic announced its own $1.5 billion enterprise joint venture just days before OpenAI’s DeployCo launch. Reuters also reported that OpenAI and Anthropic are separately exploring acquisitions of services firms that help businesses deploy AI systems, highlighting how valuable implementation expertise has become in the race for enterprise contracts.

The global enterprise AI market is projected to grow from about $21 billion in 2025 to north of $560 billion by 2034, a compound annual growth rate above 44%. For a company whose annual revenue surpassed $20 billion by the end of 2025, the enterprise segment is where long-term revenue will be built and defended.

With DeployCo, OpenAI is betting that the companies that deploy AI into their business workflows will ultimately define how far the enterprise market goes. The model wars may be far from over but the deployment race has officially begun.

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I’m Precious Amusat, Phronews’ Content Writer. I conduct in-depth research and write on the latest developments in the tech industry, including trends in big tech, startups, cybersecurity, artificial intelligence and their global impacts. When I’m off the clock, you’ll find me cheering on women’s footy, curled up with a romance novel, or binge-watching crime thrillers.

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