As OpenAI races toward its ambitious US$100 billion revenue target by 2027, the ChatGPT maker is reportedly building an army of AI consultants to bridge the gap between cutting-edge technology and enterprise boardrooms—a move that signals a fundamental shift in how AI companies are approaching the notoriously difficult challenge of enterprise adoption.
According to industry data and recent hiring patterns, OpenAI is significantly expanding its go-to-market teams at a time when the company’s enterprise business is exploding. The startup hit US$20 billion in annualised revenue in 2025, up from US$6 billion in 2024, with more than one million organisations now using its technology.
The enterprise adoption challenge
The aggressive hiring strategy reflects a broader truth about enterprise AI: the technology sells itself in demos, but implementing it at scale requires an entirely different skill set. Recent research seen in Second Talent shows that while 87% of large enterprises are implementing AI solutions, only 31% of AI use cases reach full production, with the gap between pilot projects and enterprise-wide deployment remaining stubbornly wide.
“The real story isn’t just about hiring consultants—it’s about what this reveals about enterprise AI’s maturation,” said one industry analyst who requested anonymity. “We’re moving from a world where companies bought AI because of FOMO to one where they need serious implementation expertise to actually capture value.”
The challenge is multifaceted. According to multiple industry surveys, the top enterprise AI adoption challenges in 2025 include integration complexity at 64%, data privacy risks at 67%, and reliability concerns at 60%. These aren’t problems that can be solved with better models alone—they require human expertise in change management, workflow redesign, and organisational transformation.
The competitive landscape
OpenAI isn’t alone in recognising the enterprise implementation gap. Anthropic, which is on track to meet a goal of US$9 billion in annualised revenue by the end of 2025 with targets of US$20 billion to US$26 billion for 2026, has taken a different approach by focusing on large-scale partnerships.
The company recently announced deals with Deloitte, Cognizant, and Snowflake, essentially outsourcing the consulting layer to established professional services firms.
“Anthropic is positioning Claude as the enterprise-friendly alternative—essentially ‘OpenAI for companies that don’t want to rely on OpenAI,’” according to industry research firm Sacra.
Microsoft, meanwhile, leverages its existing enterprise relationships and consulting partnerships, while Google is bundling AI capabilities into its Workspace and Cloud ecosystem. Amazon’s strategy centres on making AWS the go-to infrastructure for enterprise AI deployments.
What OpenAI’s hiring reveals
The reported consultant hiring wave suggests OpenAI is betting that direct customer engagement will prove more effective than pure partnership models. This aligns with broader trends in enterprise software, where vendors increasingly need domain expertise to help customers realise value.
Job postings analysed across multiple platforms show OpenAI recruiting for roles spanning enterprise account directors, AI deployment managers, and solutions architects—all focused on helping organisations move from proof-of-concept to production deployment.
The timing is critical. With OpenAI’s enterprise market share dropping from 50% to 34% while Anthropic doubled its presence from 12% to 24% in foundation models, the company needs to prove it can not only build the best technology but also help enterprises successfully deploy it.
The implementation reality
For enterprise IT leaders, the flood of AI consultants hiring from vendors represents both an opportunity and a warning. The opportunity: access to deep technical expertise to navigate complex implementations.
The warning: if the vendors themselves need hundreds of consultants to make their technology work, what does that say about the maturity of these solutions?
“Most organisations treat AI as a tactical enhancement rather than a strategic enabler, resulting in fragmented execution,” according to a recent industry report. Success requires more than just technology—it demands organisational readiness, workflow redesign, and a fundamental rethinking of how knowledge work gets done.
The real question isn’t whether OpenAI or its competitors can hire enough consultants. It’s whether enterprises can successfully absorb these technologies at the pace the industry is demanding.
With 42% of C-suite executives reporting that AI adoption is ‘tearing their company apart’ due to power struggles, conflicts, and organisational silos, the human challenge may prove harder to solve than the technical one.
As the AI sales arms race intensifies, one thing is clear: the winners won’t just be the companies with the best models, but those who can successfully guide enterprises through the messy, difficult work of organisational transformation.
OpenAI’s consultant hiring spree suggests it’s learning this lesson—the hard way.
(Photo by Andrew Neel)
See also: AI Expo 2026 Day 1: Governance and data readiness enable the agentic enterprise
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