OpenAI Goes Enterprise

- OpenAI signed a partnership with Infosys to bring its AI tools into large enterprise projects like code modernization and DevOps. - The company also launched ChatGPT for Clinicians, a free tool aimed at documentation and research support for U.S. healthcare professionals. - OpenAI is pivoting toward integrator-led deployments and vertical workflows, embedding models into systems integrators and sector-specific products ( ).

OpenAI is pushing deeper into corporate rollouts, pairing with Infosys on big-company software projects and releasing a clinician-focused version of ChatGPT in the U.S. (techcrunch.com) (openai.com) Infosys said on April 22 it will integrate OpenAI tools, including Codex, into its Topaz platform for software engineering, legacy modernization, and DevOps work inside large enterprises. The companies said the partnership is aimed at moving customers from pilots to scaled deployments. (infosys.com) (techcrunch.com) OpenAI said the same day that ChatGPT for Clinicians is now free for verified U.S. physicians, nurse practitioners, physician assistants, and pharmacists. The product is pitched for documentation, medical research, and care support, with cited answers and a separate clinician plan page describing it as a secure account. (openai.com) (chatgpt.com) The two moves put OpenAI inside the channels that already sell and operate technology for large organizations. Infosys brings global consulting and delivery teams; the clinician product targets a profession where OpenAI said weekly use has reached millions worldwide. (infosys.com) (openai.com) That approach builds on OpenAI’s earlier push into managed workplace products. In its clinician announcement, the company said it had already introduced ChatGPT for Healthcare for organizations that need compliance controls and broader deployment across clinicians, administrators, and researchers. (openai.com) Infosys framed the OpenAI deal around “agentic AI,” the industry term for systems that can take multistep actions rather than just answer prompts. The company said it will combine OpenAI models with Infosys services to redesign workflows and strengthen engineering execution in real delivery environments. (infosys.com) (prnewswire.com) In healthcare, OpenAI tied the launch to rising adoption and administrative strain. The company cited a 2026 American Medical Association survey saying 72% of physicians now use AI in clinical practice, up from 48% a year earlier. (openai.com) OpenAI has spent much of April shipping specialized products around its core models, including cybersecurity and coding tools. The Infosys alliance and clinician launch extend that strategy from general-purpose chatbots into integrator-led services and profession-specific workflows. (reuters.com) (techcrunch.com) (openai.com) For customers, the pitch is less about buying a standalone chatbot and more about dropping OpenAI models into existing systems, service contracts, and regulated work. That is where large technology budgets already sit — and where OpenAI now appears to be aiming. (techcrunch.com) (infosys.com)

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