Leaders, gainers and unexpected winners in the Enterprise AI arms race | Andreessen Horowitz
Leaders, gainers and unexpected winners in the Enterprise AI arms race
The enterprise AI battleground is heating up, and we’ve got some fresh data on the state of play and who’s winning.
Contrary to predictions that model progress would slow and a flood of open source and closed source players would flatten the field, the opposite is happening. An emerging oligopoly continues to dominate the leaderboard and accelerate innovation. And in a market where current perception can drive future reality, the stakes couldn’t be higher.
The enterprise leaderboard has been a hot topic on X lately…but who is the actual king of enterprise AI?
Based on our third annual CIO survey of 100 companies in the Global 2000, the honest answer is: it’s complicated. The market is too dynamic to crown a single, durable winner. But the data does reveal clear leaders, fast gainers, and a few outcomes that run counter to popular narratives.
First, let’s get one thing out of the way: we are investors in OpenAI. To keep ourselves as clear-eyed as we can, we triangulated our survey results with third party data and public revenue estimates. We also want to underscore that our survey is focused on large enterprises, where the majority of IT budget dollars sit today, and not startups where market dynamics have their own nuance and where market share may look very different.
Our methodology at a glance:
Now, onto the takeaways….
OpenAI still leads the enterprise, for now. Anthropic and Google are gaining fast.
* See footnote in disclosures
* See footnote in disclosures
For what it’s worth, Yipit’s panel data of ~1,000 mid-market and enterprise companies shows adoption rates that closely mirror our findings, with OpenAI around 85% and Anthropic near 55% and rising.
Data provided by Yipit from a proprietary panel of 1,000 mid-market and enterprise companies, showing vendor adoption over time (API or applications).
Leadership depends on the use case
Enterprise AI isn’t a single market but instead a rich and diverse set of use cases. Unsurprisingly, leadership varies sharply by workload.
* See footnote in disclosures
* See footnote in disclosures
What’s actually driving these shifts? A few themes came through clearly:
Build v. Buy: reports of the app apocalypse are greatly exaggerated
We also wanted to add insight into the age-old question: are enterprises building directly on models, or are they buying applications, instead?
The answer is nuanced, but one thing is clear: the reported death of third party apps is greatly exaggerated, to put it mildly.
* See footnote in disclosures
But the future is still unknown. The ongoing race between how quickly 3rd party apps can build deeply (with domain-specific workflows and harnesses) vs. how quickly model capabilities can improve has only intensified. That’s particularly true in the arena of software development.
Apps benefit from a multi-player market, where they can drive stronger business outcomes with intelligent model routing (that plays to the various models’ respective strengths). As the model market structure continues to evolve and mature, the outlook for certain types of applications may change drastically.
In enterprise AI apps, the winner so far is…Microsoft
Here’s where the data most clearly contradicts the online narrative.
* See footnote in disclosures
* See footnote in disclosures
Microsoft still rules enterprise apps. With all the talk of OpenAI vs. Anthropic and Claude Code vs. Codex vs. Cursor, it’s important to keep in perspective that Microsoft continues to dominate the enterprise. Much of the Global 2000 AI adoption still runs through Microsoft or AI products launched by incumbents.
All this said, the prize is still up for grabs. While these are difficult to overcome (in addition to the far reaching distribution of an incumbent such as Microsoft), we believe there is an enormous opportunity for startups to chip away at these advantages. Platform shifts create openings and enterprises consistently say they value faster innovation, deeper AI focus, and greater flexibility paired with cutting edge capabilities that AI native startups bring.
Trust in frontier labs keeps rising
* See footnote in disclosures
* See footnote in disclosures
Reported tangible ROI doesn’t quite match up to “X” ROI
Reported ROI for AI is positive, but there is still a ways to go.
* See footnote in disclosures
ROI reported by enterprises on LLMs (and AI applications) is less dramatic than one might expect based on the X AI discourse. This gap likely reflects two things:
The market is massive and (still!) growing faster than expected
* See footnote in disclosures
The prize is enormous. The dynamics are shifting. And given everything we’ve seen over the last 18 months, enterprise AI will remain the battleground to watch.
* The data presented is based on a third-party survey conducted by an independent expert network vendor. Responses reflect the views of senior decision-makers (Vice President level or above) at Global 2000 companies operating in the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, the European Union, Asia, or Australia, and have engaged in active deployment of AI or large language model (“LLM”) solutions. Participants were selected from the vendor’s proprietary database using targeted screening criteria and were not randomly sampled. As a result, the findings may not be representative of the broader market and may over-represent organizations that are more advanced in AI adoption. Responses are self-reported, subject to inherent limitations and bias, and reflect opinions and expectations at the time of the survey. The results are provided for informational purposes only and should not be construed as an endorsement or recommendation of any technology, vendor, or investment strategy.
Sarah Wang
is a general partner on the Growth team at Andreessen Horowitz, where she leads growth-stage investments across AI, enterprise applications, and infrastructure.
Justin Kahl
is a partner on the Growth investing team.
Shangda Xu
is a partner on the Growth investing team, focused on enterprise technology companies.
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