A chatbot made OpenAI famous. Now the company says the chatbot is the past.
"Chat is dead," one senior OpenAI worker told the Financial Times. That short line says a lot.
From Chatbot To 'Super App'
OpenAI plans to roll out a new ChatGPT in the coming weeks, the FT reported. The pitch is a "super app."
That means one place packed with coding tools and AI agents. An AI agent is a bot that does tasks for you, not just answers questions.
Agents take chat a step further. They can click, type, and run steps on their own.
Thibault Sottiaux, who leads OpenAI's core product, wants a personal agent. He says it should help "across everything in your life."
Think less search box, more helper that gets things done. That's a big jump from a simple chat window.
The race to build these tools is also a race for power and chips, much like AI's power problem for energy stocks.
The Real Reason: Money
Under the product talk is a money problem. OpenAI wants to get closer to a profit before it goes public.
Going public means an IPO, when a firm first sells its stock to anyone. A super app is how OpenAI plans to get ready.
ChatGPT pulled in hundreds of millions of users. But most of them pay nothing.
So the plan is to use ChatGPT as a front door. Free users come for the chatbot.
Then they get nudged toward paid tools, like the coding helper Codex. Codex helps people write computer code, the kind of tool a business will pay for.
It's the same move a store makes when it puts the milk at the back. Get you in the door, then walk you past everything else.
The plan also aims at Anthropic, OpenAI's main rival. That fight is fiercest for business clients, who pay the biggest bills.
Anthropic has won over many work teams. OpenAI wants those paying clients back.
Worth Noting
This isn't a brand-new idea. Reports about the super app go back to last year.
In March, the Wall Street Journal said the shift means dropping "side quests." That includes the video tool Sora, so the team can focus on what makes money.
In 2025, OpenAI launched many separate tools. The new plan pulls them back into one place.
It has spent two years shipping one product after another. Now it's betting that one app gets it ready for Wall Street.
One catch for investors: OpenAI is still private, so you can't buy the stock yet. For now, the closest bet is its big backer, Microsoft.
ChatGPT is one of the fastest-growing apps ever. Turning that huge crowd into payers is the whole game.
A profit would also calm nerves before any share sale. So the super app is really a money plan in disguise.
It's a bold turn for the company that kicked off the whole AI boom.
Microsoft has poured billions into OpenAI. Its stock is the easiest way to ride along, and the kind of smart money link investors track.
