Key Points
- New AI services firm backed by Blackstone, Goldman Sachs and Hellman & Friedman
- Anthropic engineers to be embedded directly in the new standalone company
- Consortium includes General Atlantic, Apollo, GIC and Sequoia Capital
Anthropic has partnered with private equity firm Blackstone, investment manager Hellman & Friedman and Goldman Sachs to launch a standalone company that will deploy its Claude artificial intelligence system across enterprise clients.
The new AI services firm, announced on 4 May, will have Anthropic engineers embedded directly within its team. It will work with companies to integrate Claude — Anthropic’s AI assistant that competes with OpenAI‘s ChatGPT — into their core business operations.
A consortium of major alternative asset managers is backing the venture. General Atlantic, Leonard Green, Apollo Global Management, Singapore’s GIC and Sequoia Capital have joined as investors alongside the founding partners.
What the New Firm Will Do
The company will serve mid-size enterprises that lack the in-house expertise to build and maintain AI systems. It will draw on the portfolio companies of its investor consortium — a network spanning hundreds of firms across healthcare, manufacturing, financial services, retail and real estate.
Krishna Rao, chief financial officer, Anthropic, said enterprise demand for Claude was outpacing any single delivery model. “This new firm brings additional operating capability to the ecosystem and capital from leading alternative asset managers,” he said.
The firm addresses a specific technical challenge in enterprise AI deployment. AI models like Claude are updated frequently — sometimes weekly — which means the software systems built around them must be designed to evolve as the underlying model improves.
The embedded Anthropic engineers will work in coordination with Anthropic’s research and product teams to ensure implementations can adapt from the outset.
Investment Partners on the Opportunity
Jon Gray, president and chief operating officer, Blackstone, said the firm aimed to build a scaled company to deploy Anthropic’s technology across businesses in its 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,” he said.
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Patrick Healy, CEO, Hellman & Friedman, described the venture as a convergence of market demand, Anthropic’s technical capability and a consortium with the reach to scale rapidly. “The near-term value to our portfolio companies is substantial,” he said.
Marc Nachmann, global head of asset and wealth management, Goldman Sachs, said the investment would enable mid-market companies to deploy Anthropic’s AI solutions.
The firm would provide access to forward-deployed engineers — specialists embedded directly with client companies rather than operating from a central team — helping smaller enterprises accelerate AI adoption.
Relevance for Indian Enterprises
The new firm’s focus on mid-market companies and its backing by global investors with India portfolios could extend its services to Indian enterprises seeking AI implementation support. GIC, Apollo and General Atlantic have significant investments in Indian companies across financial services, healthcare and technology.
Indian enterprises have increasingly sought to deploy large language models — AI systems trained on vast text datasets that can generate human-like responses — but have faced a shortage of implementation specialists. The new firm’s model of embedding engineers with clients addresses this gap, though its initial focus will be on portfolio companies of the founding investors.
Anthropic, founded in 2021 by former OpenAI researchers, is a public benefit corporation based in San Francisco.
Your Questions, Answered
What is the new Anthropic enterprise AI firm?
A standalone company formed by Anthropic with Blackstone, Hellman & Friedman and Goldman Sachs to deploy Claude AI across enterprise clients. Anthropic engineers will be embedded directly in the firm.
Who are the investors in the new AI services firm?
Founding partners are Blackstone, Hellman & Friedman and Goldman Sachs. Additional backers include General Atlantic, Leonard Green, Apollo Global Management, GIC and Sequoia Capital.
What industries will the new firm serve?
The firm will focus on healthcare, manufacturing, financial services, retail, real estate and infrastructure, initially serving portfolio companies of its investor consortium.
Why is Anthropic forming a separate services company?
Enterprise demand for Claude is outpacing existing delivery models. The new firm adds implementation capacity and capital to help mid-size companies deploy AI systems that can evolve as models improve.






