OpenAI has spent three years selling AI tools. Now it's buying the people who can install them.
DeployCo Launches With $4 Billion And 19 Investors
The OpenAI Deployment Company, or DeployCo for short, launched a few weeks ago with more than $4 billion in initial capital from 19 investors.
TPG leads the syndicate, while Brookfield alone wrote a $500 million check.
The pitch is simple: stop selling software and walking away. Embed OpenAI engineers directly inside client companies, redesign workflows from the inside, and stay there as new models come online.
The structure is borrowed from Palantir's playbook - Palantir built its enterprise business by sending engineers on-site rather than mailing license keys.
You can't run a forward-deployed engineering shop without forward-deployed engineers, and that's where Tomoro comes in.
For more on how AI is reshaping enterprise spending - and which stocks benefit - Market Briefs breaks it down each weekday morning, and you get a free investing masterclass when you sign up.
Who Tomoro Actually Is
Founded in 2023 as a partner of OpenAI, Tomoro is the kind of shop that looks small until you look at the client list.
It powers Virgin Atlantic's AI travel concierge, and Tesco, the NBA, Red Bull, and Fidelity International also run Tomoro systems.
The case study OpenAI keeps pointing to is Supercell, the mobile game studio behind Clash of Clans. Tomoro built an in-game support agent for them that handled 110 million users within 12 weeks of launch.
Headquartered in London with offices across Edinburgh, Manchester, Singapore, Sydney, and Melbourne, the firm quadrupled its headcount over the past year while monthly revenue grew more than tenfold.
Why OpenAI Needs This Now
OpenAI's enterprise API market share reportedly fell from around 50% in 2023 to roughly 25% by mid-2025, as Anthropic and Google picked up the slack.
The model race is increasingly a tie. Deployment isn't.
DeployCo gives OpenAI a captive channel into the 2,000+ portfolio companies its private equity investors collectively own.
Those portfolio companies are already getting pressure from their owners to use AI to boost productivity, and OpenAI just got a way in.
Worth Noting
The deal still needs regulatory sign-off and is expected to close in the coming months. Anthropic is reportedly working on a similar venture, raising $1.5 billion from Blackstone, Hellman & Friedman, and Goldman Sachs.
The race in enterprise AI isn't about who builds the smartest model anymore - it's about who can put one to work inside a Fortune 500 company by Friday.
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