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OpenAI is on the verge of executing its most ambitious product strategy to date. The company is preparing a comprehensive redesign of ChatGPT — internally codenamed Aria — that will reposition the platform from a conversational AI tool into a fully integrated super app. The rollout, expected within the coming weeks, signals a fundamental shift in how OpenAI envisions the role of artificial intelligence in everyday life and enterprise operations.
From Chatbot to Command Centre
The reimagined ChatGPT will consolidate a broad range of capabilities under a single interface. AI agents, coding assistance through Codex, image generation, and third party integrations with confirmed launch partners including Canva and Booking.com — alongside a pilot rollout featuring Expedia, Figma, Spotify, and Zillow — will all be embedded directly into the platform. Rather than directing users to separate tools or standalone applications, OpenAI intends for ChatGPT to become the starting point for an expansive range of digital tasks from software development to travel planning, creative work, and beyond. PYMNTS
This consolidation marks a deliberate reversal of the company’s earlier approach of launching multiple independent products. Senior OpenAI leadership has acknowledged that dispersing efforts across too many offerings diluted both focus and quality. The new strategy is unapologetically singular: one platform, one experience, one entry point.
Enterprise Ambition and the IPO Imperative
The commercial logic underpinning this transformation is considerable. Business users currently represent approximately 40% of OpenAI’s revenue — a figure the company expects to reach 50% by year end 2026, drawn from a base of two million registered business customers. By bundling productivity tools, autonomous agents, and specialised integrations into a unified platform, OpenAI is presenting enterprise customers with a compelling proposition — a single, capable AI ecosystem in place of multiple fragmented subscriptions.
This push comes as OpenAI accelerates its path to a public listing. The company filed a confidential IPO application with the SEC in late May 2026, with Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley serving as lead underwriters, targeting a listing as early as September 2026 at a valuation exceeding one trillion dollars. Notably, despite generating over $20 billion in annualised revenue, OpenAI remains heavily loss making, with internal projections indicating losses of $14 billion in 2026 alone — making a compelling platform growth story all the more critical for investor confidence.
A Defining Moment for the Industry
One senior OpenAI employee summarised the company’s internal conviction bluntly: “Chat is dead.” Whether or not that declaration proves prescient, the intent is unmistakable. OpenAI is no longer content to lead in conversational AI — it is now competing to define the infrastructure through which people and organisations interact with artificial intelligence altogether. The coming weeks will reveal whether ambition and execution align. The stakes, for OpenAI and the broader industry, could not be higher.