OpenAI and Anthropic are exploring acquisitions of technology services firms through separate ventures backed by private equity investors. The move is followed by an increase in competition in the enterprise market beyond model development.
OpenAI has created a venture called ‘The Deployment Company’ backed by investors including TPG, Bain Capital, and Brookfield Asset Management. Anthropic is building a similar initiative with support from Blackstone, Hellman & Friedman, and Goldman Sachs.
The ventures are looking at firms that help companies integrate automation tools into software systems, customer operations, internal workflows, and data infrastructure. Reuters reported that OpenAI’s venture is already in advanced talks with three acquisition targets.
The push signals a shift in strategy. Leading AI companies are seeking a larger role in enterprise implementation and consulting rather than limiting themselves to selling models through APIs and subscriptions.
The development could affect India’s IT services industry, which has built its business around large outsourcing contracts, software maintenance, and enterprise support services.
Companies such as Tata Consultancy Services, Infosys, Wipro, and HCLTech depend heavily on workforce-driven delivery models. Industry analysts say automation tools can reduce demand for repetitive engineering and support work, including coding, testing, analytics, and customer service operations.
The competition could pressure traditional outsourcing contracts where billing is tied to headcount and long project cycles. The model resembles the approach used by Palantir Technologies that combines software platforms with direct operational support for enterprise clients.
Also Read: Elon Musk’s Lawyer Questions Brockman Over Nearly $30B OpenAI Stake and Altman Ties
Indian technology firms have already increased investments in automation platforms, cloud services and enterprise consulting as clients accelerate adoption of generative tools. Several firms have partnered with OpenAI, Microsoft and Google to build enterprise solutions around automation and workflow management.
Analysts expect Indian IT companies to focus more on cybersecurity, compliance, AI governance and industry-specific consulting as routine support work becomes increasingly automated. The latest move by OpenAI and Anthropic shows the competition is shifting from building models to controlling how businesses deploy and use them.