- Roadshow to Rome
- Awards
- Exhibitors
- Speakers
- Media Partners
- News
Capgemini has entered a strategic partnership with OpenAI to accelerate enterprise artificial intelligence (AI) adoption using Frontier, OpenAI’s platform designed to build, deploy and manage AI coworkers across organisations. As a founding member of the OpenAI Frontier Alliance, Capgemini will focus on helping enterprises move from pilot projects to fully embedded AI systems integrated into core business processes.
The partnership targets what both companies describe as the “AI opportunity gap”, where organisations have access to advanced AI models but struggle to deploy them at scale. Capgemini will address key barriers such as data readiness, governance frameworks, systems integration and organisational change.
Fernando Alvarez, Chief Strategy and Development Officer at Capgemini, said 2026 will mark a shift in enterprise AI adoption. He stated that businesses are expected to move from experimentation to industrialisation, with the main challenge now centred on embedding AI securely and reliably into core business processes.
He added that AI coworkers are not limited to chat interfaces. Instead, they are designed to execute workflows, collaborate with human teams and deliver measurable business outcomes. Frontier provides enterprises with a structured platform to operationalise AI systems at scale.
While AI model capabilities have advanced rapidly, Alvarez said enterprise readiness remains uneven. Many organisations face obstacles in preparing data, establishing governance controls and integrating AI systems with legacy infrastructure.
Under the alliance, Capgemini will create a dedicated Enterprise Frontier delivery function. This team will work closely with OpenAI’s Forward Deployed Engineering teams to implement solutions directly within client environments.
OpenAI developed Frontier to support organisations in building AI coworkers that operate within existing enterprise systems. Forward Deployed Engineers bring product and engineering expertise into client operations, enabling faster deployment and structured implementation. Capgemini will contribute industry knowledge and transformation capabilities to ensure AI solutions integrate with operational processes and compliance requirements.
The companies aim to ensure that AI deployments move beyond limited pilots and into responsible, scaled production environments.
Aiman Ezzat, CEO of Capgemini, described the partnership as a long-term strategic collaboration. He stated that combining Capgemini’s domain expertise and assets with OpenAI’s models and platform would allow both companies to develop solutions that integrate AI more deeply into enterprise workflows.
Alvarez also confirmed that the alliance is not a short-cycle technology partnership. Instead, it is structured to support long-term enterprise transformation. The collaboration focuses on redesigning workflows, managing digital labour and generating measurable business value from AI systems.
India will play a central role in the partnership’s implementation strategy. According to Alvarez, the country is not only a delivery hub but also a co-innovation centre for scaling enterprise AI globally. Capgemini plans to leverage its workforce and technology expertise in India to support global AI transformation projects.
By aligning consulting, engineering and AI platform capabilities, the partnership aims to provide enterprises with structured support for AI adoption. The focus remains on secure deployment, governance compliance and integration with existing business systems.
As organisations seek to integrate AI into operations, Capgemini and OpenAI are positioning the Frontier platform as a framework to help enterprises manage AI coworkers within controlled and scalable environments.
Innovation does not wait, and neither should you — AIBC Eurasia, 8–11 February 2027, convenes 14,000 global decision-makers in Dubai and Ras Al Khaimah at the heart of MENA’s tech transformation.