Tuesday, May 26, 2026

Turns Out AI Needs Coworkers Too

For the last three years, the AI industry has been obsessed with one thing: who has the smartest model. GPT-4. Claude. Gemini. Mistral. Every launch promised more reasoning, better coding, faster outputs, and increasingly human-like capabilities. But somewhere along the way, a difficult truth emerged inside enterprises: Most companies still had no idea how to actually operationalize AI.

That realization may explain one of the most important strategic moves OpenAI has made outside of pure research: the launch of the OpenAI Deployment Company, backed by more than $4 billion in investment from a consortium of 19 major firms spanning private equity, consulting, finance, and systems integration. At the same time, OpenAI agreed to acquire the AI consulting firm Tomoro, immediately adding around 150 specialized deployment engineers to the initiative.

This is not merely an expansion of enterprise sales. It is OpenAI acknowledging that the biggest bottleneck in AI adoption is no longer intelligence. It is integration. And that changes everything. The announcement signals a broader shift in the AI industry: the center of gravity is moving away from model development and toward workflow transformation. In other words, the companies that win the next decade of AI may not necessarily be those with the most advanced models, but those capable of embedding AI deeply into real operational systems.


That distinction matters. A language model sitting in a browser tab is impressive. A language model integrated into procurement, finance, logistics, legal review, customer operations, and decision-making systems is economically transformative. OpenAI appears to understand that now. According to OpenAI, the new Deployment Company will place “Forward Deployed Engineers” directly inside organizations to redesign workflows, connect AI systems to enterprise data, and operationalize AI safely at scale.

This approach resembles a hybrid between a consulting firm, a systems integrator, and a software company. It is also remarkably similar to the operating model popularized by Palantir Technologies, where engineers work alongside clients to solve operational problems rather than simply delivering software licenses. Several analysts and observers immediately recognized this parallel.

The implications are massive because enterprise AI adoption has largely stalled in a peculiar middle ground. Many organizations already have AI pilots. Very few have AI-native operations. That gap exists because deploying AI inside a real enterprise is messy. Data systems are fragmented. Compliance requirements are complex. Employees resist change. Legacy workflows are deeply embedded. Departments operate in silos. Security teams block integrations. Leadership struggles to quantify ROI.

Most organizations are not lacking AI tools. They are lacking operational translation layers. That is precisely the gap OpenAI is now attempting to own. The acquisition of Tomoro is especially revealing in this context. Tomoro had already been helping companies operationalize AI deployments for enterprise environments, with clients reportedly including Tesco and Virgin Atlantic. Instead of building deployment expertise slowly from scratch, OpenAI effectively bought a functioning implementation muscle.

This is strategically important because deployment expertise is becoming a competitive moat. The AI industry spent years believing APIs alone would be enough. Build the model, expose the endpoint, let developers innovate. But enterprises rarely transform through APIs alone. They transform through embedded operational change. And operational change requires people. The list of firms backing the Deployment Company also tells an important story. The consortium includes firms such as Goldman Sachs, SoftBank, McKinsey & Company, Capgemini, and Bain & Company.

These are not passive investors. They are distribution channels. Collectively, these firms influence thousands of enterprise clients worldwide. OpenAI is effectively creating an ecosystem where AI deployment becomes integrated into existing consulting and transformation pipelines. That creates a very different business dynamic than traditional SaaS. Instead of selling software subscriptions, OpenAI is positioning itself closer to enterprise infrastructure.

And perhaps more importantly, it is trying to ensure that enterprise workflows become optimized specifically around OpenAI systems before competitors do. This matters because once AI becomes deeply embedded into operational processes, switching costs rise dramatically. A company might switch productivity software relatively easily.

Switching an AI-native operational architecture integrated into finance, legal, customer support, and supply chains is much harder. That is why this move is fundamentally about strategic entrenchment. The timing is equally notable.

OpenAI’s move comes amid growing enterprise momentum from rivals like Anthropic, whose Claude models have seen strong traction in corporate settings. Multiple industry observers viewed the Deployment Company as a direct response to the realization that enterprise AI adoption depends less on raw intelligence benchmarks and more on implementation support. In many ways, this resembles earlier shifts in enterprise technology history. Cloud computing only became transformative once companies learned how to restructure around it.

ERP systems only created value when workflows changed alongside the software. Digital transformation initiatives only succeeded when operational behavior evolved. AI is entering that same phase now. And this brings us to perhaps the most interesting question:

What do these embedded AI engineers actually do inside companies?

The answer is less glamorous than model demos but infinitely more valuable.

They map workflows, identify repetitive decision points, connect internal systems, redesign operational processes, create governance layers,  train teams, measure productivity gains, and reduce deployment friction. Most importantly, they turn experimental AI usage into measurable business outcomes.

Consider a real-world example from the airline industry.

A global airline typically operates through fragmented operational systems: maintenance records, customer service channels, crew scheduling, logistics systems, weather data, compliance systems, and pricing engines often sit across disconnected platforms.

Before AI deployment, customer support agents may need to search through multiple systems manually during disruptions. Maintenance teams might spend hours interpreting technical logs. Operations managers may rely on reactive workflows instead of predictive intelligence.

Now imagine embedding Forward Deployed Engineers directly into that environment. Instead of simply providing a chatbot, the deployment team redesigns operational workflows around AI orchestration:

  • Maintenance issues are automatically summarized and prioritized using AI.
  • Crew scheduling disruptions are analyzed in real time.
  • Customer service systems generate personalized rebooking options instantly.
  • Internal knowledge systems become conversational interfaces.
  • Operational anomalies trigger predictive escalation models.

The result is not “AI assistance.” The result is a redesigned operational system. That distinction is crucial. Many organizations mistakenly think AI transformation means adding copilots to existing workflows. In reality, the largest gains come from rebuilding workflows entirely. This is why OpenAI’s Deployment Company could become one of the most consequential enterprise AI initiatives of the decade.

It recognizes that intelligence alone is not enough. Execution is the moat. The broader market implications are enormous as well. Traditional consulting firms now face a difficult future. If AI companies themselves begin embedding deployment teams directly into enterprises, the line between software vendor and consulting partner starts disappearing.

The future enterprise stack may no longer separate:

  • software providers,
  • implementation partners,
  • systems integrators,
  • workflow consultants,
  • and AI infrastructure vendors.

Those functions may collapse into a single operating layer. OpenAI appears to be moving aggressively toward that model. And while the headlines focus on the $4 billion investment, the more important story is philosophical:

The AI race is no longer just about building intelligence. It is about embedding intelligence into the operating system of business itself. That is a far bigger market. And potentially a far more defensible one.

#OpenAI #ArtificialIntelligence #EnterpriseAI #DigitalTransformation #AIAdoption #GenerativeAI #FutureOfWork #AIConsulting #BusinessTransformation #TechnologyStrategy

Hyderabad, Telangana, India
People call me aggressive, people think I am intimidating, People say that I am a hard nut to crack. But I guess people young or old do like hard nuts -- Isnt It? :-)