OpenAI to refocus on coding AI, business tools in major reset plan: Report

New Delhi: OpenAI is preparing a major shift in its product strategy, with top executives now looking to focus more on coding tools and enterprise users. The move comes as competition heats up in the AI market, especially from rivals that have found strong traction with developers and businesses.

According to reports from The Wall Street Journal and Reuters, internal discussions are already underway, and employees may soon be told which projects will take a backseat. The company’s leadership appears to be rethinking its earlier approach of launching multiple products across different categories at the same time.

OpenAI looks to sharpen focus on business and coding

Fidji Simo, CEO of applications at OpenAI, told employees during a recent all hands meeting that the company needs to act fast and stay focused. She said, “We cannot miss this moment because we are distracted by side quests.”

She added, “We really have to nail productivity in general and particularly productivity on the business front.”

Last year, the company launched several products like Sora for video, a browser called Atlas, and even e-commerce features. That wide approach helped it stay in headlines, but it also made things messy inside, as per WSJ.

Pressure from Anthropic and enterprise demand

The urgency is not random. Rival Anthropic has quietly built a strong position among enterprise users. Its Claude tools, especially for coding, have become popular inside tech companies.

Some engineers even spent holidays testing Claude tools, which shows how serious adoption has become.

OpenAI is trying to catch up here. It recently rolled out updates to Codex and introduced GPT 5.4, which is tuned for professional tasks. Simo shared that Codex now has more than two million weekly users.

New deals signal enterprise push

Reuters reports that OpenAI is also in talks with private equity firms like TPG, Bain Capital, and Brookfield to form a joint venture. The deal could be valued at around 10 billion dollars, which is roughly ₹90,000 crore.

The plan includes:

  • Around 4 billion dollars investment from partners
  • Early access to OpenAI tools for portfolio companies
  • Stronger push into enterprise AI adoption

Simo told Reuters, “As demand for AI continues to skyrocket, we want to help our customers deploy these technologies in all the ways that help them create impact.”

What this means going forward

Inside OpenAI, there were signs of confusion earlier. Teams shifted priorities often and computing resources moved between projects at the last minute, as per WSJ.

Now the company seems to be picking a clearer path.