OpenAI taps McKinsey, BCG, Accenture and Capgemini to speed Frontier AI agent rollouts

February 25, 2026
OpenAI taps McKinsey, BCG, Accenture and Capgemini to speed Frontier AI agent rollouts

San Francisco, Feb 24, 2026, 23:45 PST

  • OpenAI launched multi-year “Frontier Alliances” with Accenture, BCG, Capgemini and McKinsey
  • Program pairs OpenAI engineers with consultants to move corporate AI from pilots into core workflows
  • Push comes as OpenAI and rivals like Anthropic and Google chase enterprise adoption of AI agents

OpenAI has launched multi-year “Frontier Alliances” with Accenture, Boston Consulting Group (BCG), Capgemini and McKinsey & Company to help companies move beyond AI pilot projects and into full-scale deployments. Reuters

The move matters because many big firms have tried generative AI in pockets and then hit the hard part: plugging it into messy data, old systems and staff routines. OpenAI is betting a more hands-on model — part software, part implementation muscle — gets it out of the lab and into budgets.

It also lands in a crowded moment. OpenAI is competing with rivals such as Anthropic and large tech groups like Google for enterprise spending, while software makers push their own automation tools into the same buyers.

OpenAI said the consulting partners will build dedicated practice groups and teams certified on OpenAI technology, working alongside its Forward Deployed Engineering team — engineers who embed with customers during rollouts. The company said it will back those teams with technical resources, roadmap insight and access to OpenAI product and research groups. Openai

Frontier is OpenAI’s enterprise platform for building and managing “AI agents” — software that can carry out tasks across applications and data, not just answer questions. OpenAI has described a built-in “context layer” that connects corporate data and apps, and an “observability” system that lets firms monitor and manage what agents do.

Denise Dresser, OpenAI’s chief revenue officer and former Slack chief executive, said companies “need a path, and they need help” to adopt the technology. “Siloed AI deployments do not deliver the value,” she said.

In OpenAI’s announcement, BCG chief executive Christoph Schweizer said, “AI alone does not drive transformation.” Accenture CEO Julie Sweet said “business transformation requires more than great models,” while McKinsey’s Bob Sternfels said leaders “must rewire their businesses.”

Fortune reported the alliances could add pressure on enterprise software vendors such as Salesforce, Microsoft, Workday and ServiceNow, which also rely on the big consultancies to help deploy their products. The magazine reported early Frontier customers include Intuit, State Farm, Thermo Fisher and Uber. Fortune

The enterprise tug-of-war is spilling into markets. Software shares have swung in recent weeks as investors debate how quickly agent-style tools could reshape demand for traditional software and IT services. “The conversation might change from disruption to what are the use cases,” Eric Kuby, chief investment officer at North Star Investment Management Corp, said after an Anthropic partnership announcement. Reuters

Still, turning pilots into production can bog down in data cleanup, security review and training, and agents can fail in real workflows in ways demos do not show. If clients slow deployments over governance or liability worries, the alliances could turn into another round of proof-of-concept work.

TechCrunch noted OpenAI’s rival Anthropic has also cut deals with consulting firms, including Deloitte and Accenture, underscoring how consultancies are trying to stay central as AI tools spread through corporate IT. Techcrunch