OpenAI is reportedly planning to fold its ChatGPT application, Codex coding platform, and AI-powered browser into a single desktop ‘superapp’, a move that signals a shift toward enterprise and developer audiences and away from the consumer market that made the company a household name.
The unified product will merge the ChatGPT interface, the Codex coding tool, and OpenAI’s browser known internally as Atlas into a single desktop application, the Wall Street Journal reported Thursday. The mobile version of ChatGPT is not part of the consolidation and will remain unchanged. OpenAI President Greg Brockman will temporarily oversee the product overhaul and associated organizational changes, while Chief of Applications Fidji Simo leads the commercial effort to bring the new app to market, the report added.
Simo confirmed the plan the same day in a post on X. “Companies go through phases of exploration and phases of refocus; both are critical,” she wrote. “But when new bets start to work, like we’re seeing now with Codex, it’s very important to double down on them and avoid distractions.”
The superapp announcement follows an all-hands meeting on March 16, in which Simo told employees the company needed to stop being distracted by “side quests” and orient aggressively toward coding and business users.
“We realized we were spreading our efforts across too many apps and stacks, and that we need to simplify our efforts,” the Journal reported that day, citing Simo’s address to the employees. “That fragmentation has been slowing us down and making it harder to hit the quality bar we want.” At the same meeting, Simo outlined the commercial imperative plainly: “Our opportunity now is to take those 900 million users and turn them into high-compute users. We’ll do that by transforming ChatGPT into a productivity tool.”
More than a product refresh
The superapp is being designed around agentic AI, systems capable of autonomously executing multi-step tasks such as writing and debugging software, analyzing data, and completing complex workflows without continuous human instruction, the Journal reported. That positions it less as a consumer chatbot and more as an AI-powered work environment aimed at developers and enterprise knowledge workers.
Sanchit Vir Gogia, chief analyst at Greyhound Research, said the move goes beyond product consolidation. “This is not a clean enterprise pivot — it is a forced convergence driven by internal fragmentation, competitive pressure, and the need to monetized where value is actually realized,” he said. “The real value is shifting to where intent becomes action. That is workflows, not conversations.”
The announcement is the latest in a series of enterprise-facing moves. In February, OpenAI launched Frontier, an agent orchestration platform, and announced partnerships with Accenture, BCG, Capgemini, and McKinsey to embed its technology into business workflows.
The numbers behind the pivot
The urgency behind these moves becomes clear when the competitive data is examined. According to enterprise spend management software vendor Ramp, a year ago only one in 25 businesses on its platform paid for Anthropic; today that figure has jumped to nearly one in four. In new enterprise deals, Anthropic is now winning approximately 70% of head-to-head matchups against OpenAI, it said.
Gogia, however, flagged a structural risk. ChatGPT’s dominance was built on simplicity and universal accessibility, qualities a workflow-centric superapp trades away. “In trying to serve consumers, developers, and enterprises within a single interface, OpenAI risks diluting the very clarity that made ChatGPT dominant,” he said.
That risk is compounded by a governance challenge that enterprise IT leaders are only beginning to reckon with.
The governance gap
For IT leaders evaluating OpenAI tooling, Gogia pointed to a deeper challenge the superapp introduces. “The biggest constraint on agentic AI is not capability. It is control,” he said. “Identity management is not designed for non-human actors. Audit trails are incomplete. And there is no mature control plane that governs how agents act, what they access, and how those actions can be reversed or contained.”
Microsoft and Google hold a structural advantage here: Their AI is embedded within platforms that already manage identity, access, and compliance at enterprise scale, a gap enterprise buyers have repeatedly flagged as a persistent concern with OpenAI’s approach. It is precisely that trust deficit that has given Anthropic its opening.
“The battle is no longer about who builds the best chatbot. It is about who owns how work gets done,” Gogia said. “Enterprises are making platform decisions now — and those decisions will not be based on who is most advanced. They will be based on who is most dependable.”
OpenAI did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
This article first appeared on Computerworld.



