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OpenAI revenue chief Dresser says enterprise AI adoption is 'at a tipping point'

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Why This Matters

OpenAI's Chief Revenue Officer Denise Dresser highlights that enterprise AI adoption is reaching a critical tipping point, driven by new initiatives like the Deployment Company and strategic acquisitions such as Tomoro. These developments aim to accelerate AI integration into complex business workflows, enabling faster and more scalable deployment across industries. This signals a significant shift towards widespread enterprise AI adoption, impacting both the tech industry and consumers by fostering innovative AI-powered solutions.

Key Takeaways

OpenAI Chief Revenue Officer Denise Dresser said Monday that we're at a "tipping point" in enterprise artificial intelligence adoption, and the startup's new Deployment Company will help with the push to get more companies on board.

"Think about the complex workflows, about how you actually build a product service, a product market, a product, and this structure of this company is going to allow us to do that at speed and scale," Dresser told CNBC's "Squawk on the Street."

OpenAI announced the new business unit on Monday, which included the acquisition of applied AI consulting firm Tomoro. The OpenAI Development Company is a partnership with 19 investment and consultancy firms, including Bain, Goldman Sachs and SoftBank, and is majority-owned and controlled by OpenAI.

The Tomoro acquisition will bring about 150 engineers specializing in deploying frontier AI models into OpenAI's umbrella to work with clients. These forward-deployed engineers will help businesses with AI adoption.

"Forward-deployed engineers can sit with an organization, sit with their users, understand the workflow, and then help them take that capability from their back-office applications, connecting it to the model, and then really building intelligence in terms of each of the workflow," Dresser told CNBC.