OpenAI unveiled Frontier today, a platform designed to help enterprises build and manage AI agents that operate across teams and systems. The platform equips agents with workplace-like skills, enabling them to understand context, learn through feedback, and work within defined roles.
OpenAI introduced Frontier to solve challenges around deploying agents that can work across departments and handle complex enterprise tasks. The company said the platform provides agents with shared context, onboarding capabilities, feedback systems, and permission structures that mirror human workflows.
Executives stated that AI has enabled work previously left unfinished or unattempted across departments. “AI helped me do things I couldn’t do before,” said one employee, echoing sentiments from 75% of surveyed enterprise workers. The shift is being observed across technical, operations, and customer-facing teams.
Over one million companies already use OpenAI’s tools, the company reported. At one manufacturer, agents shortened optimization cycles from six weeks to one day. A global investment firm used AI agents to free up 90% more time for its sales force.
OpenAI confirmed that HP, Intuit, State Farm, Uber, Oracle, and Thermo Fisher are among Frontier’s early enterprise adopters. Additional companies, including BBVA, Cisco, and T-Mobile, have tested its core agent-management features in pilots. These deployments focused on AI applications across logistics, customer support, and infrastructure optimization.
As it was reported earlier by Blockonomi, OpenAI released the standalone Codex desktop app days before unveiling Frontier. Codex is temporarily open to all ChatGPT users on Apple platforms. The app offers a unified workspace to run and organize multiple AI agents per development project.
Codex provides developers with built-in tools for code generation, project handling, and collaborative task execution. It supports agent threads, live updates, and project-based management of agent roles. Developers can also access skills like image generation within the same workspace.
CEO Sam Altman called Codex “the most loved internal product we’ve ever had,” during a company briefing on Friday. “It’s been totally an amazing thing for us to be using recently at OpenAI,” Altman said. He also shared that he has been actively building with Codex during his own time.
OpenAI’s rollout of Frontier and the Codex app reflects its dual focus on enterprise operations and developer productivity. Frontier equips AI agents with the skills needed to work across teams, while Codex offers developers a streamlined space to manage multiple agents for coding and task execution. Together, these launches show OpenAI’s push to move AI beyond isolated tools into real-world workflows.
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