OpenAI announced today that customers on its Business, Enterprise, Edu and Teachers subscriptions can now access cloud‑based “workspace” agents inside ChatGPT. The agents are designed to take on repetitive work, pulling data from the web or internal systems and delivering results through familiar collaboration tools.

One example highlighted in the company’s blog post is an agent that scans the internet for product feedback, compiles a summary and posts the report to a designated Slack channel. Another agent drafts follow‑up emails in Gmail for sales teams, allowing reps to focus on conversations rather than typing boilerplate messages.

OpenAI frames the new agents as an evolution of its GPT custom‑chatbot platform launched in 2023. While GPTs remain available, the firm says workspace agents add “context awareness” and “process compliance.” They can pull the right information from linked systems, follow established team workflows, ask for human approval when a decision is required, and keep work moving across applications.

Teams can build an agent once and then share it across the organization. A product manager can create a reporting agent, test it in ChatGPT, and later deploy the same agent to Slack or other integrated tools. OpenAI promises that the agents will improve over time as users provide feedback and adjust configurations.

The rollout arrives amid growing interest in autonomous AI agents across the industry. OpenClaw, an AI agent that gained viral attention for its ability to act on commands, recently hired its founder, Peter Steinberger, to join OpenAI. At the same time, Anthropic offers its Claude Cowork agent, which can complete tasks using files stored on a user’s computer. OpenAI’s new offering positions the company to compete directly in the enterprise productivity space.

OpenAI’s spokesperson, Taya Christianson, directed reporters to the blog announcement but did not provide additional details. The company hinted that converting existing GPTs into workspace agents will become straightforward, suggesting a migration path for early adopters.

Industry observers note that the agents could reshape AI‑driven newsrooms and content platforms, where automated gathering of data and draft generation are already valuable. By embedding the agents in a cloud environment, OpenAI reduces the need for on‑premise infrastructure, making the technology accessible to a broader range of businesses.

As AI capabilities continue to expand, the balance between automation and human oversight remains a focal point. OpenAI’s agents aim to respect that balance by seeking approvals before executing high‑impact actions, a feature that may appeal to regulated sectors such as finance and healthcare.

Customers interested in testing the workspace agents can sign up through the OpenAI dashboard. The company plans to iterate on the feature based on user feedback, with the goal of refining how agents interact with existing workflows and third‑party apps.

This article was written with the assistance of AI.
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