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Microsoft reportedly trains sales team to downplay rivals OpenAI and Anthropic

Ramo by Ramo
16 July 2026
in AI & Tech
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Microsoft sales team in training session discussing AI partners
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Microsoft reportedly trains sales team to downplay rivals OpenAI and Anthropic

Microsoft appears to be preparing its sales force for a more aggressive stance against its AI competitors. According to a new report from Bloomberg, the company held an internal meeting on Tuesday where executives outlined a plan for salespeople to negatively compare AI products from companies like OpenAI, Google, and Anthropic to Microsoft’s own offerings. The strategy session, framed as part of the new fiscal year’s approach, heavily emphasized pitching the efficiency and cost-effectiveness of Microsoft’s in-house models.

During the meeting, Executive Vice President Jay Parikh reportedly told the room: “Everyone else is selling parts. We’re selling the full end-to-end system. That’s the story that we all need to get out there and tell in FY27.” Copilot executive vice president Jacob Andreou went further, delivering a presentation that directly compared Copilot to Anthropic’s chatbot Claude. According to Bloomberg, Andreou noted that when it came to performance inside Microsoft’s office applications, Anthropic’s model was “slower and less accurate, and lacked the proper security integrations.”

A New Sales Playbook

Coaching a sales team on how to talk down competitors is hardly unusual in the business world. What makes Microsoft’s approach noteworthy is the identity of the targets. OpenAI, Google, and Anthropic are the same companies Microsoft has long depended on for the AI models powering its own products. For years, Microsoft enjoyed a close partnership with OpenAI, including exclusive access to its API and models in exchange for capital and compute resources. That arrangement shifted in April when the companies amended their partnership, dropping the exclusivity clause and freeing OpenAI to sell directly to Microsoft’s competitors.

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This revised relationship helps explain the new sales pitch. Microsoft has been swapping out OpenAI and Anthropic models from flagship applications like Word and Excel in favor of its own internal models, according to a report earlier this month. That move was described as a cost-cutting measure, but it also signals a broader strategic pivot toward self-reliance in AI. By training its salespeople to emphasize the superiority of its own models, Microsoft is trying to change the narrative around its AI capabilities.

Why Microsoft Is Pivoting

Behind the scenes, Microsoft has been facing pressure from investors who question the massive spending on AI infrastructure. The company’s stock outlook has been less than optimal over the past year, and executives are eager to demonstrate that the investment is paying off. Talking up the competitiveness of Microsoft’s in-house models is a direct attempt to calm those concerns and build confidence in the company’s long-term AI strategy.

The shift also reflects a growing rivalry between Microsoft and its former partner OpenAI. As both companies pursue dominance in the enterprise AI market, the tension between cooperation and competition has become impossible to ignore. Microsoft’s decision to position itself as the one-stop shop for AI tools, rather than a reseller of third-party models, could reshape the dynamics of the industry. The company is betting that businesses prefer an integrated ecosystem over piecemeal solutions from multiple vendors.

Anthropic, meanwhile, has been gaining ground with its Claude chatbot, especially in markets like India where it recently localized pricing. The company has also invested in advertising and brand awareness. Microsoft’s sales training appears designed to counter that momentum head-on by highlighting perceived weaknesses in Anthropic’s offering.

The Bigger Picture

This aggressive sales strategy is just one piece of a larger chess game in the AI sector. Microsoft, Google, Amazon, and a handful of startups are all vying for the attention of enterprise customers who are still figuring out how to deploy AI responsibly and cost-effectively. By telling a story of integration and reliability, Microsoft hopes to differentiate itself from competitors that offer standalone models or APIs.

Whether the sales team’s new talking points will resonate with customers remains to be seen. But the move underscores a fundamental truth: the AI industry is entering a new phase where partnerships can quickly turn into rivalries, and internal capabilities matter more than exclusive access to someone else’s technology. For now, Microsoft is betting that its full stack approach will win over skeptical buyers. To stay updated on how this competition unfolds, check out the latest AI news on Mylistingo.

Tags: AI competitionAnthropicCopilotMicrosoftOpenAI
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Ramo

Ramo

Ramo is the editorial voice of Mylistingo — an AI and technology news platform based in The Hague, Netherlands. Covering artificial intelligence, machine learning, robotics, and the future of technology, Ramo delivers accurate, accessible reporting for both general audiences and industry professionals. Every article is fact-checked and written to meet Mylistingo's strict no-fabrication editorial standards.

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