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US ChatGPT use nearly doubled since 2023, but rising competition may limit growth

The news: OpenAI’s ChatGPT has rapidly become a mainstream AI tool, with new data showing that 34% of US adults have now used it—almost double the 2023 figures, per Pew Research Center.

ChatGPT’s adoption is particularly high among younger adults, but 66% of US adults have never used ChatGPT, and 20% are still unaware of its existence. Here are some trends:

  • Youth movement. 58% of under-30s have used ChatGPT versus just 10% of those over 65.
  • Education divide. 52% of postgrads are users compared with 18% with a high school education or less.
  • Workplace boom. 28% of employees use it professionally, a 250% increase from 2023.

Why it’s worth watching: ChatGPT leads, but rivals are gaining ground with specialized features that could fragment the market and challenge adoption.

The contenders: 

  • Google’s Gemini is deeply integrated into Google’s apps, while Anthropic’s Claude dominates the AI coding space.
  • Free and open-source models like DeepSeek-R1 and Meta’s Llama are attracting budget-conscious users.
  • The shift from general AI chatbots to task-specific AI agents has resulted in a burgeoning landscape of competitors—including Salesforce, Cohere, Inflection AI, and Microsoft—challenging OpenAI for enterprise adoption. 

Internal and external hurdles could slow growth: OpenAI needs to overcome various headwinds as it seeks expansion. 

  • Partners have become adversaries. Microsoft’s race to integrate OpenAI’s models into its products while developing competing in-house AI (like MAI-1) creates friction.
  • Talent exodus is a growing problem. Meta’s aggressive recruitment of OpenAI researchers thins the bench of experts and dilutes OpenAI’s brain trust. 
  • Investor pressure is mounting. As Microsoft and SoftBank pour in billions of dollars in investments, expectations for OpenAI’s continued profitability could result in unfinished product releases.

Our take: OpenAI’s first-mover advantage is under threat from all sides—vertically from specialized AI agents, horizontally from rival chatbots, and internally from talent wars and Microsoft. 

For CMOs and CTOs, this means betting on ChatGPT’s current dominance while preparing for a fragmented future where no single platform reigns supreme. Finding the right AI solutions for specific use cases is a smarter play than betting the farm on an all-in-one solutions provider. 

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