OpenAI tops 3 million paying business users, launches new features for workplace

OpenAI tops 3 million paying business users, launches new features for workplace


Sam Altman, co-founder and CEO of OpenAI, speaks during the New York Times annual DealBook Summit at Jazz at Lincoln Center in New York City on Dec. 4, 2024.

Michael M. Santiago | Getty Images

OpenAI on Wednesday announced that it now has 3 million paying business users, up from the 2 million it reported in February. 

The San Francisco-based startup rocketed into the mainstream in late 2022 with its consumer-facing artificial intelligence chatbot ChatGPT, and began launching workplace-specific versions of the product the following year.

The 3 million users include ChatGPT Enterprise, ChatGPT Team and ChatGPT Edu customers, OpenAI said. 

“There’s this really tight interconnect between the growth of ChatGPT as a consumer tool and its adoption in the enterprise and in businesses,” OpenAI’s chief operating officer Brad Lightcap told CNBC in an interview. The company supported 400 million weekly active users as of February.

OpenAI expects revenue of $12.7 billion this year, a source confirmed to CNBC. In September of last year, the company expected to see an annual loss of $5 billion on $3.7 billion in revenue, according to a person close to the company who asked not to be named because the financials are confidential.

Lightcap said OpenAI is seeing its business tools adopted across industries, including highly regulated sectors like financial services and health care. Companies including Lowe’s, Morgan Stanley and Uber are users, OpenAI said. 

The company also announced new updates to its business offerings on Wednesday. 

ChatGPT Team and ChatGPT Enterprise users can now access “connectors,” which will allow workers to pull data from third-party tools like Google Drive, Dropbox, SharePoint, Box and OneDrive without leaving ChatGPT. Additional deep research connectors are available in beta. 

Read more CNBC reporting on AI

OpenAI launched another capability called “record mode” in ChatGPT, which allows users to record and transcribe their meetings. It’s initially available with audio only. 

Record mode can assist with follow up after a meeting and integrates with internal information like documents and files, the company said. Users can also turn their recordings into documents through the company’s Canvas tool.

Lightcap said enterprise customers have been asking for updates like these, and that they will help make OpenAI’s workplace offerings more useful. 

“It’s got to be able to do tasks for you, and to do that, it’s got to really have knowledge of everything going on around you and your work,” Lightcap said. “It can’t be the intern locked in a closet. It’s got to be able to see what you see.”

OpenAI said it has been signing up nine enterprises a week, and Lightcap said the company will try to sustain that pace over time. 

“People are starting to really figure out that this is a part of the modern tool stack in the knowledge economy that we live in,” he said.

WATCH: Consumer need isn’t there for OpenAI hardware product, says Michael Nathanson

Consumer need isn't there for OpenAI hardware product, says Michael Nathanson



Source

China factory activity tops expectations in April — but growth slows as new orders soften
World

China factory activity tops expectations in April — but growth slows as new orders soften

Workers producing garments at a textile factory that supplies clothes to fast fashion e-commerce company Shein in Guangzhou in southern China’s Guangdong province. Jade Gao | Afp | Getty Images China’s factory activity topped analysts’ expectations in April, although growth slowed from the prior month when it hit a year-high, as new orders saw a […]

Read More
CNBC Daily Open: Trump’s big threats and Big Tech’s bigger wallets
World

CNBC Daily Open: Trump’s big threats and Big Tech’s bigger wallets

Iran is back at the top of our headlines after U.S. President Donald Trump threatened Tehran again. Source

Read More
Asia-Pacific markets open lower as oil climbs on Iran tensions, Fed holds rates
World

Asia-Pacific markets open lower as oil climbs on Iran tensions, Fed holds rates

A man passes an electronic quotation board displaying the Nikkei 225 stock prices on the Tokyo Stock Exchange in Tokyo on March 31, 2026. (Photo by Kazuhiro NOGI / AFP via Getty Images) Kazuhiro Nogi | Afp | Getty Images Asia-Pacific markets opened mostly lower Thursday, tracking overnight losses in key Wall Street benchmarks as […]

Read More