OpenAI COO says ‘we have not yet really seen AI penetrate enterprise business processes’
“You’ve got really powerful AI systems that any person can use in their individual capacity.
And enterprises are these highly complex organizations with a lot of people, teams, all having to work together, a lot of context. There are very complex goals that have to be achieved using a lot of different systems and tools. ” There is a lot of talk around AI agents taking over business processes and claiming that “SaaS is dead.
” While these predictions have moved SaaS stocks at times, they haven’t really come true.
Lightcap said that demand is strong, without sharing any numbers.
“We almost always find ourselves having to manage too much demand. We are still an organization that is growing, and so there is this global demand factor that we would love to be able to meet, and we are working as best as we can to be able to meet,” Lightcap said.
At the same time, OpenAI is thinking about how to quantify success in the enterprise.
Lightcap said that OpenAI will try to measure Frontier’s impact based on “business outcomes, not on seat licenses. ” (The company hasn’t yet shared pricing for Frontier. )
Days after TechCrunch’s conversation, OpenAI partnered with consultancies like Boston Consulting Group (BCG), McKinsey, Accenture, and Capgemini to deploy its technology in an enterprise push. Even rival Anthropic launched plug-ins for finance, engineering, and design for enterprises to build agents based on Claude.
” In keeping with the India AI summit, OpenAI has made a number of recent announcements around its business in the world’s largest market.
And voice models now feel good enough and also good enough to run in low-latency and low-bandwidth environments, where you really can start to enable access to technology for a group of people who maybe were more disenfranchised than not,” Lightcap said. The company also signed an enterprise contract for the usage of its tools and to deploy compute.
The AI company is also set to open two new offices in India in Mumbai and Bengaluru.
However, these are likely to be sales and go-to-market offices.
When I asked Lightcap if these offices would include technical talent, he said, “Never say never.
” There is also a fear of job impact, especially in countries like India, where the IT services and BPO (business process outsourcing) industry is prominent, as AI tools automate some of the tasks. In the past few weeks, Indian IT company stocks have dipped as the market is taking into account the fact that areas like coding might require fewer humans.
Lightcap said that the company is being “grounded” in what it has observed in terms of jobs market.
“Our view is that over time, jobs will change.
I think we don’t yet know where, how, or what, but it seems inevitable that work will look different in the future than it looks today. And that’s natural, that’s part of the business cycle. It’s part of the global and dynamic economy that we live in. And so I think what we have to do is be able to obviously have empathy for where jobs are changing at a high rate,” he noted
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