‘Enterprise demand for Claude is significantly outpacing any single delivery model,’ Anthropic Chief Financial Officer Krishna Rao said.
Amid Anthropic’s partner program buildout, the artificial intelligence upstart has revealed that it plans to form an AI services company of its own while still investing in solution providers.
The San Francisco-based Claude maker is forming this AI services company to work with midsize customers across industries to introduce the AI tool into operations, Anthropic said in an online post Monday. Anthropic is forming the new company with financial giants Blackstone, Hellman & Friedman and Goldman Sachs.
A consortium of alternative asset managers is backing the company, according to Anthropic. General Atlantic, Leonard Green & Partners, Apollo Global Management, Singaporean sovereign wealth fund GIC and Sequoia Capital are some of those firms.
The total financial commitment to the new company is $1.5 billion, multiple news outlets reported Monday. Anthropic, Blackstone and Hellman & Friedman will invest around $300 million each. Goldman Sachs will invest about $150 million.
“Enterprise demand for Claude is significantly outpacing any single delivery model,” Anthropic Chief Financial Officer Krishna Rao said in a statement. “This new firm brings additional operating capability to the ecosystem.”
[RELATED: Anthropic Pours $100 Million Into Claude Partner Network In Channel Push]
Inside Anthropic’s New AI Services Company
CRN has reached out to Anthropic and the financial firms involved in the new company for comment.
The plan is “to build the definitive enterprise AI services platform,” Patrick Healy, CEO at Hellman & Friedman, said in a statement.
The new company will democratize the forward-deployed engineers model that other technology vendors have adopted and should help Goldman Sachs’ network of portfolio companies in its asset management business and other companies of similar sizes, Marc Nachmann, the firm’s global head of asset and wealth management, said in a statement.
Rao reiterated Anthropic’s commitment to the Claude Partner Network, adding that “leading systems integrators are central to how Claude reaches large enterprises.” The new company will also be part of the network.
Ryan Gross, head of Anthropic engineering at Irvine, Calif.-based Anthropic and Amazon Web Services solution provider Caylent–which recently announced a dedicated practice and new business unit focused on the Claude platform–told CRN in an interview that he does see Claude replacing some customers’ existing IT tools and augmenting others.
Customers like Claude Code, for example, for its ability to go beyond integrated development environments (IDEs), Gross said. “It can take on a lot of the overall life cycle,” he said.
Other Claude partners include CRN Solution Provider 500 members Infosys, Accenture, Cognizant, Slalom and Leidos, as well as “born in the AI” services partner upstarts like Tribe AI and Ciridae.
Anthropic Reaffirms Commitment To Claude Partner Network
Anthropic is continuing its commitment to the recently revealed Claude Partner Network, which is receiving an initial $100 million investment and a new certification program. System integrators and other services partners currently lead work adopting Claude to organizations’ core operations with hands-on engineering and deep familiarity with business needs, according to the vendor.
The network has been expanding since launch and will continue to receive investments in support programs, funding and teams, according to Anthropic.
The new, unnamed company will benefit from applied AI engineers from Anthropic working alongside its engineers, according to the vendor. Together, the two teams will identify where Claude has the greatest outcomes in a customer. They will also build custom products and services and support customers over the long run.
The new AI services company aims to deliver that capability further, reaching community banks, midsize manufacturers and regional health systems that lack in-house resources for building and running frontier AI deployments.
The plan is for a small team working with the customer to understand where Claude makes the most sense at first, then the new company’s engineers will team up with Anthropic applied AI employees to develop Claude-powered systems tailored to the organization.
The new company aims to solve the issue of monthly and weekly changes to Claude’s capabilities and ever-improving AI models, which can cause a challenge for engineering teams used to typical software deployments.
The financial firms working with the new company have been investing heavily in the technology space. Recent investments include Blackstone participating in Cyera’s recent $400 million round, Blackstone and GIC joininginvestment rounds in Databricks, Goldman investing in Armis and Sequoia investing in Eon.
Anthropic’s product innovations throughout 2026 have upended the stocks of technology companies from a range of technology categories the channel works with, including software-as-a-service vendors and cybersecurity companies.







