OpenAI And Infosys Partner To Expand Enterprise AI Tools

OpenAI and Infosys have announced a strategic collaboration aimed at bringing OpenAI’s artificial intelligence tools to more businesses, with a focus on enterprise adoption and large-scale deployments.
The partnership links OpenAI, the U.S.-based AI company, with Infosys, a global IT services and consulting firm. The companies said the collaboration is designed to help enterprise customers adopt AI more broadly across engineering and business workflows, using OpenAI technology and Infosys’ implementation capabilities.
The announcement comes as OpenAI pushes further into corporate use cases and as large consulting and services firms play a growing role in turning fast-moving AI advances into deployed systems inside major organizations. Infosys, which works with companies on technology modernization and digital transformation, is positioning the collaboration as a way to accelerate enterprise AI transformation and deliver AI value at scale.
A key element of the broader enterprise push highlighted in related company communications is expanding access to OpenAI tools in corporate environments, including AI assistance for software development. OpenAI has also emphasized scaling offerings such as Codex for enterprise use, reflecting demand for AI agents that can support coding and engineering work at business-grade reliability and security expectations.
For many large companies, adopting generative AI is not just a matter of licensing a model. Deployments often require integrating tools into existing systems, setting up governance, managing data and security requirements, and training teams to use new capabilities effectively. Partnerships that pair model providers with major integrators can reduce friction for enterprises that want to move beyond pilots and into production use across departments.
This collaboration matters because it signals continued momentum in the market for packaged enterprise AI programs, where consulting firms help standardize deployment patterns and accelerate rollouts. For OpenAI, working with large implementation partners can broaden distribution into global businesses that already rely on established services firms for major technology initiatives. For Infosys, aligning with a leading AI provider strengthens its portfolio as clients seek practical paths to apply AI in engineering and operations.
The companies have framed the effort as focused on enterprise scale, suggesting it will target real-world business implementations rather than limited experiments. That includes support for AI-led engineering work and expanding access to OpenAI tools through enterprise-ready channels.
Next steps will be determined by customer adoption and the rollout of joint offerings under the collaboration. Enterprises evaluating the partnership can expect more information about how OpenAI’s tools will be delivered through Infosys-led programs, including how those tools fit into existing technology stacks and delivery models.
The collaboration underscores a broader shift: enterprise AI is increasingly being delivered not just by AI developers, but through alliances that connect advanced models with the services needed to deploy them across the world’s biggest organizations.
