Anthropic just made a major move that signals a new chapter in how AI gets deployed inside real businesses – and it involves some of the biggest names in global finance.
On May 4, 2026, Anthropic announced the formation of a new, standalone enterprise AI services company, built alongside Blackstone, Hellman & Friedman, and Goldman Sachs. The new firm is not a side project or a pilot program. It is a fully AI-native services company designed to take Claude – Anthropic’s flagship AI model – and embed it directly into the core operations of mid-sized businesses across America and beyond. The consortium backing the venture has committed roughly $1.5 billion to make it happen.
The financial breakdown is telling. According to The Wall Street Journal, Anthropic, Blackstone, and Hellman & Friedman each put in around $300 million, while Goldman Sachs contributed approximately $150 million. But the founding partners are not alone. The new company also carries backing from a wider group of heavyweight alternative asset managers – General Atlantic, Leonard Green, Apollo Global Management, Singapore’s sovereign wealth fund GIC, and Sequoia Capital. That is an unusually broad coalition, and it speaks to how seriously Wall Street is taking the race to deploy frontier AI inside actual enterprises.
So what exactly will this company do? The short answer is that it closes a gap that has been growing for years. Big consulting firms and systems integrators like Accenture, Deloitte, and PwC have done well helping Fortune 500 companies integrate AI – and Anthropic has partnered with all of them through its Claude Partner Network. But a vast middle layer of the economy – community banks, regional health systems, mid-sized manufacturers, specialty retail chains – has largely been left out. These companies stand to gain enormously from AI, but they simply do not have the internal engineering talent or the financial runway to build and run frontier AI deployments on their own. This new firm is built specifically for them.
The model is hands-on and unusually close to the source. A typical engagement starts with a small team – a mix of the new firm’s engineers and Anthropic’s own Applied AI staff – sitting down with a client to understand exactly where AI can create the most value. This is not a case of dropping a software subscription in someone’s lap and hoping for the best. The engineers learn how the business actually runs, where time and money disappear, and then they build custom Claude-powered systems around that reality. Crucially, because the firm’s engineers work in direct coordination with Anthropic’s research and product teams, the solutions they deliver are designed to evolve as Claude itself evolves. That matters more than it might sound – Claude’s capabilities change on a monthly or even weekly basis, and keeping enterprise deployments current with a fast-moving model is a genuine engineering challenge that most companies cannot handle internally.
Blackstone’s Jon Gray, the firm’s President and Chief Operating Officer, put it plainly: “We intend to build a scaled, world-class company to deploy Anthropic’s incredible technology across a range of businesses in our portfolio and beyond. We believe it can help break down one of the most significant bottlenecks to enterprise AI adoption by expanding the number of highly skilled implementation partners.” That bottleneck – the shortage of engineers who know both the AI and the business domain deeply – is exactly what this venture is designed to attack.
Patrick Healy, CEO of Hellman & Friedman, framed it as a rare convergence of timing, technology, and capital: “This is a rare convergence: massive market need, the unmatched AI technical capability of Anthropic, and a consortium of investors with the reach to scale fast. The near-term value to our portfolio companies is substantial, and we are excited by the long-term potential to build the definitive enterprise AI services platform.” It is a notably ambitious statement – “definitive” is not a word you throw around lightly – but given the size of the market gap they are targeting, it is not an unreasonable aspiration.
Goldman Sachs’s Marc Nachmann, Global Head of Asset and Wealth Management, zeroed in on what he called democratizing access to forward-deployed engineers. His point is worth sitting with: the companies that have done the most with AI so far are the ones that can afford to hire world-class AI engineers internally. This new firm, by contrast, can bring that same level of talent to a network of portfolio companies and other mid-market businesses that Goldman and its partners touch – companies that would never otherwise have that access. “Simply having the model does not alter your workflows or operational methods,” Nachmann told CNBC. “It’s essential to have individuals who can merge the technology with real business activities and facilitate those changes.“
To understand what that looks like in practice, Anthropic’s own announcement walks through a healthcare example that is worth taking seriously. Picture a network of physician practices spread across multiple sites. Clinicians at places like that routinely spend hours every shift on documentation, medical coding, prior authorizations, and compliance reviews – work that is critical but that takes direct time away from patient care. In an engagement with this new firm, engineers would sit down with the clinicians and IT staff, learn where time actually disappears in a shift, and build Claude-powered tools that fit into the workflows staff already use – not alongside them, but inside them. The result is clinicians getting time back to do what they trained for. The same logic applies in manufacturing, in financial services, in retail, in real estate.
The timing of this announcement is also notable in a competitive context. TechCrunch reported that OpenAI is simultaneously pursuing its own joint venture with a similar enterprise services focus. The two leading AI labs are essentially running parallel plays to capture the mid-market, and the race is now well and truly on. For Anthropic, this new firm represents its most direct push yet into a segment of the economy where long-term contracts and deep operational relationships – not just API calls – define success.
Krishna Rao, Anthropic’s Chief Financial Officer, acknowledged the underlying pressure driving the decision: “Enterprise demand for Claude is significantly outpacing any single delivery model.” When demand outpaces delivery, you build new delivery infrastructure. That is precisely what this company is – not just a new investment, but a structural expansion of how Anthropic reaches the world.
The new firm will also formally join Anthropic’s Claude Partner Network, the growing ecosystem of consulting and systems integration firms through which Claude is deployed globally. That membership matters because it means the company will have access to Anthropic’s programs, funding, and support infrastructure – and that its work will be integrated into the broader ecosystem rather than running as a standalone silo. As Claude continues to evolve, the new firm will be among the first to benefit from those improvements, giving it a built-in advantage over generic consulting shops trying to work with AI from the outside in.
The initial customer base will draw heavily from the portfolio companies of the founding investors themselves. That is a smart go-to-market move – Blackstone, Hellman & Friedman, and Goldman Sachs collectively manage or have invested in hundreds of companies across every major sector, giving the new firm an immediate pipeline of warm prospects that already trust the parent firms. Take Medline, one of the largest privately held healthcare product suppliers in the U.S., which is jointly owned by Blackstone, Hellman & Friedman, and Carlyle – exactly the kind of complex, multi-site operation where a deep Claude deployment could reshape how an entire company functions. From there, the plan is to expand outward to independent mid-market companies that fit the same profile.
What makes this venture structurally different from a traditional consulting firm is the embedded Anthropic presence. Engineers from Anthropic’s Applied AI team are not just advisors or occasional consultants – they are part of the firm’s core delivery model. That is an unusual arrangement, and it creates a flywheel: the more companies the firm works with, the more real-world deployment experience flows back to Anthropic’s research and product teams, which in turn makes Claude better, which makes the firm’s future engagements more valuable. It is a tight loop between the AI lab and the businesses using the AI, and it is exactly the kind of structural advantage that is hard for competitors to replicate quickly.
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