OpenAI's Enterprise Push: What the Press Releases Aren't Telling You
Everyone's writing about GPT-5 and a million business customers, but the real story is what this means for the automation folks who'll actually have to implement it.
Bildnachweis: Lottie animation by Centre Robotics (LottieFiles Free, used with credit). · source
Look, I've read about a dozen articles this week about OpenAI hitting a million business customers and launching GPT-5 for enterprise. Most of them just repackaged the press release. That's fine for the tech blogs, but nobody's asking the questions that matter to people like us who actually have to make this stuff work on factory floors.
I'll be honest, when I was at Kuka, we went through three different "AI revolution" cycles. Each time, the software folks promised the moon and we spent months figuring out why their demos didn't work when you had oil mist in the air or vibration from the stamping press next door. So forgive me if I'm reading OpenAI's announcements with a bit of skepticism.
What's Actually Being Announced Here?
The headlines are GPT-5 and a million business customers. The ServiceNow partnership is getting play too. OpenAI says GPT-5 is their "most advanced model" (when has anyone ever said otherwise about their newest thing?) and that it's "transforming enterprise AI, automation, and workforce productivity."
They've also announced a Jobs Platform and new certifications, which is interesting. They're clearly trying to address the skills gap before it becomes their problem. Smart move, actually.
The ServiceNow integration is about powering "AI-driven enterprise workflows, summarization, search, and voice." For those who don't follow enterprise software, ServiceNow is basically the nervous system for a lot of big companies' IT and operations. If you've ever submitted a helpdesk ticket at a Fortune 500, you've probably touched ServiceNow.
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