ChatGPT’s Super-App Pivot Before the IPO
OpenAI rolled out the most significant overhaul of ChatGPT since its 2022 launch, transforming the chatbot into what the company describes as a “super-app for knowledge work.” The June 2026 redesign consolidates features that were previously scattered across separate products — DALL-E image generation, Advanced Data Analysis, web browsing, and GPT Store custom models — into a unified, context-aware interface that anticipates what the user needs before they ask.
The timing is strategic: OpenAI is widely expected to file for its initial public offering before the end of 2026, with investment banks estimating a valuation between $150 billion and $200 billion. The super-app repositioning expands ChatGPT’s addressable market from “AI chatbot” to “productivity platform,” a narrative that resonates with public-market investors who have seen Microsoft’s Copilot and Google’s Gemini follow similar trajectories.
What Changed Under the Hood
ChatGPT now runs on GPT-5.6 Sol, OpenAI’s fastest reasoning model, with the free tier receiving access to the base model and paid subscribers getting the full “Pro” reasoning depth. Response latency has dropped to under 300 milliseconds for most queries — fast enough that conversations feel instantaneous rather than asynchronous.
The most significant UX change is Canvas 2.0, a persistent workspace alongside the chat that can hold documents, spreadsheets, code files, and images. Users can drag content between the chat and canvas, ask ChatGPT to edit or analyse canvas content, and export finished work directly to Google Docs, Microsoft Office, or Notion. It effectively turns ChatGPT from a Q&A tool into a lightweight operating system for knowledge tasks.
For developers, the new GPT Actions framework allows ChatGPT to connect to external APIs and perform multi-step tasks — booking meetings, querying databases, sending emails — through a natural language interface. OpenAI has partnered with Salesforce, HubSpot, and Dutch-based Mollie (for payment actions) as launch partners for the Actions ecosystem.
Dutch Business Impact
The Netherlands has been an enthusiastic adopter of ChatGPT. According to OpenAI’s usage data, the Netherlands ranks fifth globally in ChatGPT usage per capita, behind only the United States, Singapore, Israel, and Switzerland. Dutch companies including Booking.com, Adyen, and ASML have enterprise ChatGPT agreements covering tens of thousands of employees.
“The super-app approach changes the conversation with our enterprise clients from ‘should we allow ChatGPT?’ to ‘how do we integrate ChatGPT into our workflows?’,” said an OpenAI enterprise sales lead at the Amsterdam launch event in late June. For Dutch businesses that have already standardised on ChatGPT for drafting, research, and coding, the expanded capabilities promise to deepen the platform’s integration into daily work.
As OpenAI prepares for what could be the largest technology IPO since Facebook, the super-app strategy represents a bet that the future of AI interfaces is not a chatbot — it is a platform. And with 300 million weekly active users already in the ecosystem, OpenAI has the distribution to make that bet work.







