Anthropic is partnering with Goldman Sachs and Blackstone to launch a $1.5 billion venture to accelerate AI adoption across businesses, according to The Wall Street Journal.

The venture is also backed by a consortium including Apollo Global Management, General Atlantic, Leonard Green, GIC, Singapore’s sovereign wealth fund, and Sequoia Capital, giving it a built-in network of hundreds of portfolio companies as its initial customer base.

The model addresses a key constraint in the AI market: the shortage of skilled professionals capable of implementing systems at scale. Many companies have access to advanced tools but struggle to integrate them into workflows. Anthropic’s approach embeds engineers within organisations to redesign processes and operationalise AI, moving beyond advisory services.

This structure gives Anthropic a built-in distribution. By combining its Claude models with a network of investor-owned companies, it accelerates adoption in the middle market, where deployment has lagged despite rising demand.

Portfolio companies across healthcare, manufacturing, financial services, retail, and real estate will act as the first proving ground. Once validated, the platform will expand to other mid-sized firms, particularly those backed by private equity.

The push comes amid a surge in Anthropic’s funding momentum. The company raised $13 billion in a Series F round in 2025, followed by a $30 billion Series G round in February 2026 that valued it at $380 billion. It has also secured billions more from strategic investors, including a fresh $5 billion commitment from Amazon.  

OpenAI is also building a similar model through a $10 billion joint venture with TPG and Bain Capital, aimed at helping enterprises deploy advanced systems at scale. The next phase of competition is moving beyond building models to embedding them directly into business operations.