The news: This year’s World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, is doubling as a live pitch stage for AI firm CEOs pushing “enterprise-first” momentum.
With nearly 3,000 political and company leaders from 130+ countries on the ground and record turnout from heads of state and top executives, AI leaders are using the spotlight to set the tone and raise expectations for the year.
- OpenAI CFO Sarah Friar told CNBC that ChatGPT’s enterprise customers are already 40% of OpenAI’s business and could reach 50% by year-end, with more than 1 million business customers using its tools.
- Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei attributed 80% of Anthropic’s business as coming from enterprise, while 20% is consumer, adding that the former is a steadier revenue base.
- Meta CTO Andrew Bosworth said Meta’s Superintelligence Labs is on track to deliver its first four high-profile internal models in Q1, indicating Meta’s next push is productizing research into usable consumer and internal tools, per Reuters.
Zooming in: AI vendors are trying to set expectations on a world stage before procurement season kicks off. If they can control the narrative early, they remain top of mind as businesses and governments determine AI investments and strategies.
- Anthropic and OpenAI are battling for enterprise adoption—access to enterprise and federal government leaders all in one place provides unprecedented opportunities for engagement and dealmaking.
- In Meta’s case, Davos is a platform to state that the results from last year’s AI spending and talent hoard are around the corner, even if the company doesn’t have anything to show right now.
Industry implications: Enterprise AI adoption is now the main prize, and large organizations are likely to standardize on one or two AI vendors to reduce security risk and integration complexity.
Procurement is also tightening, shifting pilots and evaluations away from hyped model benchmarks and toward operational requirements like audit trails, permissions, uptime, and data boundaries.
Vendors that can credibly sell reliability and enterprise readiness will shape which platforms become default inside workflows. Defaults will influence standardization and drive future adoption across businesses and consumers.
This content is part of EMARKETER’s subscription Briefings, where we pair daily updates with data and analysis from forecasts and research reports. Our Briefings prepare you to start your day informed, to provide critical insights in an important meeting, and to understand the context of what’s happening in your industry. Non-clients can click here to get a demo of our full platform and coverage.